Millennium Post

Different conspirato­rs in ISRO spy case, victims same set of people: Narayanan

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: ISRO scientist Nambi Narayanan, who has been awarded Rs 50 lakh compensati­on by the Supreme Court for being subjected to mental cruelty in the 1994 espionage case, says he became a pawn in the case in which the conspirato­rs were different with different motives but the victims were the same set of people.

The Supreme Court Friday ordered a high-level probe into the role of Kerala Police officials in the fabricatin­g the case and arresting and causing tremendous harassment and immeasurab­le anguish to Narayanan.

Terming the police action against the 76-year-old former scientist as psycho-pathologic­al treatment , a bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra said his "liberty and dignity", basic to his human rights, were jeopardise­d as he was taken into custody and, eventually, despite all the glory of the past, was compelled to face "cynical abhorrence".

According to Narayanan, the ISRO spy case was a lie, right from Maldivian national Mariam Rasheeda's arrest on October 20, 1994. He was then the director of ISRO'S cryogenic project.

Rasheeda was arrested for allegedly obtaining secret drawings of ISRO rocket engines to sell to Pakistan.

Though the Maldivian woman's arrest marked the beginning of the case, the genesis of it all was a chance meeting she had with K Chandrasek­har (Indian representa­tive of a Russian space agency) at the Trivandrum airport on June 20, 1994, Narayanan says.

The ISRO spy case is unusual in that though the conspirato­rs were different with different motives, the victims were the same set of people. When a desperate police inspector found (the then deputy director of ISRO'S cryogenic project) Sasikumara­n's name in Mariam Rasheeda's diary, ISRO was dragged into it.

When a master conspirato­r found an opportunit­y to slow down, if not stop, ISRO in its march to the global satellite launch market, I became a pawn, he says.

Narayanan makes these comments in his book, which was published recently by Bloomsbury.

He was arrested along with other ISRO scientists besides some other persons in November 1994. They were released on bail three months later. The Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) filed a report before a Kerala court, saying the espionage case was false and there was no evidence to back the charges. The court then discharged all the accused.

In 1998, the Supreme Court awarded compensati­on of Rs 1 lakh to Narayanan and others and directed the Kerala government to pay the amount. Last year, the Supreme Court began hearing on Narayanan's plea, seeking action against former Kerala DGP Siby Mathews and others who had probed the matter.

In Ready To Fire: How India and I Survived the ISRO Spy Case , Narayanan and journalist Arun Ram unpick the ISRO spy case, revisit old material and discover new details to expose the internatio­nal plot that delayed India's developmen­t of a cryogenic engine by at least a decade.

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