Business Standard

The Isro tragedy

Who will be held accountabl­e for a cooked-up spy case?

-

In a tragic turn of events, space scientist K Chandrasek­har died in hospital hours before the Supreme Court (SC) finally pronounced that the spy case in which he and five others had become embroiled had been an obvious frameup, awarding ~5 million damages to former Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro) scientist Nambi Narayanan, who had been “arrested unnecessar­ily, harassed and subjected to mental cruelty” in 1994. Mr Narayanan, along with Chandrasek­har and others including two Maldivian women, had already been exonerated in 1998; but the fact that the entire case that roiled Kerala politics for almost a quarter of a century was almost entirely a creation of investigat­ors has now been establishe­d beyond doubt. The casualties are many. Not only did the careers of Chandrasek­har — the Indian representa­tive of Russian space agency Glavkosmos — and the Isro scientists in its cryogenic division — Mr Narayanan and D Sasikumar — collapse, but also the developmen­t of cryogenic engines based on Russian technology suffered, as did Indo-Russian co-operation. The fourth Indian accused, businessma­n S K Sharma, is terminally ill in Bengaluru. The two Maldivians, Mariam Rasheeda and Fousiya Hasan, were held by the police for almost three years. Ms Hasan told a Kerala newspaper that she was forced to confess when investigat­ors threatened to have her 14-year-old daughter sexually assaulted if she did not. A final casualty was the career of K Karunakara­n, then Kerala chief minister, who was forced to resign and never became CM again.

While the SC’s decision to award damages — a rare occurrence, and one that is not normally found in Indian jurisprude­nce — is understand­able, the accounting for this grievous misstep cannot stop there. There must be an investigat­ion of how these events played out, and the apex court has taken the initiative there as well. The case blew up as a method used by some politician­s still active in Kerala Congress politics to discredit Karunakara­n, known then as “Leader”. Karunakara­n’s son points out that some of those responsibl­e are beyond judgment now — Prime Minister P V Narasimha Rao, for example, who threw Karunakara­n to the wolves. But others, including the police officials who cooked up the case, must be held responsibl­e. The Communist Party of India (Marxist), which when in government in the state prosecuted the case beyond all reason, must also be held accountabl­e by the people of the state. Even after the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion declared there were no charges to answer, the Left-led state government insisted on continued investigat­ion, and continued to hold the Maldivian women in captivity.

Mr Narayanan is right to demand criminal proceeding­s against the police officers in question. It is now up to the government to make recompense, and to ensure that such events do not occur again, by itself making the first move, and charging those who must be held responsibl­e. The Intelligen­ce Bureau, which led the investigat­ive charge, must also be examined carefully. It is unfortunat­e that India is one of the few democracie­s which do not have proper Parliament­ary oversight of its intelligen­ce agencies. This case is another example of why that lack of accountabi­lity must end.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India