Charles Chellapah
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Charles Chellapah (born 1939, died February 14, 1966) was a Singaporean photojournalist of Indian origin who was killed on-assignment during the Vietnam War.
[edit] Biography
Chellapah (also known as Canagaratnam Chellappah) was born in Indonesia. Unable to find a job as a photojournalist he emigrated to Singapore. Stringing for the now defunct Malay Times Chellapah worked for two years in Jesselton, Borneo before arrived in Saigon on jan 21, 1966. Freelancing for the Associated Press, he went to a place American GIs called "Hell's Half Acre". Some 25 miles north of Saigon, it was a densely jungled rubber plantation honey-combed with Viet Cong Tunnels and overrun by snipers. His dramatic close-up images of casualties and combat prompted AP photo editor Horst Faas to warn Chellappah to be more cautious and take fewer chances. On Valentine's Day, 1966, Chellapah was killed in a landmine blast while attempting to rescue soldiers hurt from a mine blast.
[edit] References
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