Deccan Chronicle

The missle man

DRDO FELLOW D.S. REDDY HAS BEEN CONFERRED WITH A LIFETIME ACHIEVEMEN­T AWARD

- NIKHITA GOWRA

India made history when the country’s first Ballistic Missile, Prithvi, was successful­ly tested in 1988. It meant that India had finally taken the first step towards becoming self-sufficient in producing wide-range ballistic missiles. On March 25, a scientist who played a vital role in developmen­t and flight evaluation for the project and a Defence Research and Developmen­t Organisati­on Fellow, D. Sreenivasu­lu Reddy of Hyderabad, was conferred with a Lifetime Achievemen­t Award for four decades of his contributi­on to the organisati­on by the Defence Minister, Arun Jaitley. He was also instrument­al in the successful flight test of the ship-launched

Dhanush missile. “I’m honoured that the organisati­on decided to confer this rare award to me,” says 68-year-old D.S Reddy, recalling that the Integrated Guided Missile Developmen­t Programme (the umbrella programme which included the Prithvi project), would have been nothing without Dr Abdul Kalam.

“He initiated the programme in 1983 and I joined DRDO in 1973. Before Dr Kalam joined us, we had no great expectatio­ns. The vision and leadership was missing and we didn’t know what we were capable of. He turned it all around. I interacted with him for the first time when I was being interviewe­d for a promotion and Dr Kalam said I did well. I also felt gratified when he asked my teammates, ‘Can you launch this missile without Mr Reddy?’, indicating that my work was valued.”

In the 43 years of his service in the field, he has also been conferred with the Agni Award for Excellence and the Self-Reliance and the DRDO Performanc­e Excellence Award. He says that he got into this field by chance. “I had completed my MSc and in the ‘70s, finding a job was very tough. I saw an advertisem­ent in a newspaper that said DRDO was hiring. I didn’t know much about it, but I applied. That was my first and last job, and I didn’t think of quitting because the work environmen­t was excellent. Superiors would give us freedom and help us out if we got stuck,” he says, stressing that the Ballistic Missile Programme is important to defend ourselves. “Developing and under-developed countries are not allowed to import missiles but our adversarie­s have got them through clandestin­e means. It is all the more necessary now to be ready to defend ourselves,” he says and adds that he is grateful for his family’s support. “I would hardly be able to spend time with the kids, but they understood the importance of my job,” he says.

Before Dr Kalam joined us, the vision and leadership was missing. He turned it all around — D.S. REDDY, FORMER SCIENTIST

 ??  ?? D.R. Reddy working on the missile
D.R. Reddy working on the missile
 ??  ?? NEW HEIGHTS: D.S. Reddy, former scientist and DRDO Fellow
NEW HEIGHTS: D.S. Reddy, former scientist and DRDO Fellow

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