City
Epaper

Happy that truth surfaced during my lifetime: Ex-ISRO scientist Nambi Narayanan

By IANS | Updated: July 11, 2024 01:00 IST

Thiruvananthapuram, July 11 Former scientist Nambi Narayanan, who had a harrowing time after being made an accused in ...

Open in App

Thiruvananthapuram, July 11 Former scientist Nambi Narayanan, who had a harrowing time after being made an accused in the infamous ISRO espionage case, has said that he is happy that the truth behind the case has surfaced during his lifetime.

"I knew that I had done no wrong, and when the Supreme Court has exonerated me, it is enough for me. I was sure that the truth would come out one day, and I am happy it has come during my lifetime only. I don't think I want the wrongdoers to be punished for what they did to me. I don't even want an apology from them," said Nambi Narayanan, the retired scientist, who was awarded Padma Bhushan in 2019.

He was reacting to media reports that surfaced on Wednesday detailing the charge sheet in the conspiracy behind the ISRO espionage case filed by the Delhi unit of the CBI at the CBI Court here, which said the entire case was nothing but a fabricated story.

The charge sheet revealed that the case originated based on a concocted story created by then Circle Inspector S. Vijayan.

It was further said that the team leader of the probe team, the now retired Director General of Police Siby Mathews, ordered the arrest of the veteran scientist Narayanan without any evidence.

Among the five officials named in the CBI charge sheet are Mathews, Vijayan, then Deputy Superintendent of Police K.K. Joshua, and the then Intelligence Bureau officers Jayaprakash and R.B.Sreekumar, who retired as the Gujarat Director General of Police.

This charge sheet filed by the CBI came after the Supreme Court in 2018 directed a three-member committee under retired Supreme Court judge D.K. Jain to probe if there was a conspiracy among the then police officials to falsely implicate Narayanan.

The ISRO espionage case surfaced in 1994 when Narayanan was arrested on charges of spying along with another senior official of ISRO, two Maldivian women, and a businessman.

The CBI exonerated Narayanan in 1995, and since then he has been fighting a legal battle against Mathews and other police officials.

Mathews was later promoted to the rank of Director General of Police and took a voluntary retirement scheme, months before he was to have superannuated and become the Chief Information Officer of the state. He has since retired from that post and is now settled in the state capital city.

Incidentally, this case took place when the factional feud in Congress between the K. Karunakaran and the A.K. Antony factions led by Oommen Chandy was at its peak.

Karunakaran had to quit the office in 1995 after it was found out that he was shielding his close aide and senior police officer, Raman Srivastava, who later became the state police chief. After retirement, he served as an advisor to Chief Minister Pinarayi Vijayan ( 2016-21).

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other SportsCAS puts stay on Churchill Brothers’ I-League medal ceremony after Inter Kashi’s appeal

NationalPahalgam attack: I don't think terrorists asked religion, says Karnataka Minister

BusinessEngineering goods exports from India reach record high in 2024-25, hit USD 116.7 billion

NationalUDAN’s eight years: Scheme gives wings to common citizens, their dreams turning into reality

NationalMP Accident: Several Feared Dead As Van Falls Into Poisonous Well in Mandsaur

National Realted Stories

NationalLynched for belief: The systemic persecution of Ahmadi Muslims in Pakistan (IANS Analysis)

NationalMP: Five feared dead as van plunges into well; one rescuer killed, four injured

NationalDelhi Slum Fire: Two Killed as Massive Blaze Erupts Near Sector 17 in Rohini (Watch Video)

NationalIt is essential to make state drug-free: Haryana CM

NationalHimachal takes steps to retain specialist doctors