On 27 July 1975, Duraiappah who had returned from Brunei where his wife was the Chief Medical Officer, went to the Varadaraja Perumal Temple (Maha Vishnu Temple) in Ponnalai with his fourteen-year-old daughter Eesha for their weekly worship in the
Peugeot 404 which had been given to Duraiappah by his supporters. As they arrived at the temple, Duraiappah was shot dead by masked men. D.K. Rajaratnam, who was a member of the Jaffna Municipal Council who was with Duraiappah was also shot and injured. It was reported that the three masked men who carried out the shooting got into the mayor's car and drove off. It was later found abandoned at Sendankulam by the police. The police began a major search operation to locate the killers while a special team headed
Ana Seneviratne,
Deputy Inspector General of Police for Range B was sent on orders from Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike. The entire Jaffna peninsula was cordoned off by the police and all vehicles searched. The
inquest into the death was carried out by J.M.D. Jesurathnam Magistrate of Malakkam. As news spread of the shooting, many gathered at the
Chelliah Kumarasuriar, Minister of Posts and Telecommunications visited the hospital. However, his assassination was widely blamed on the rebel
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and its leader
V. Prabhakaran. On 25 April 1978 the LTTE issued an
open letter, which was published in the
Virakesari, claiming responsibility for the assassination of eleven people including Duraiappah. The Duraiappah Stadium in Jaffna was named after him. ==Family==