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Madhavan Nair, 3 Other Scientists Indicted For Antrix-Devas Deal

Bangalore, Feb 5: A committee set up by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Saturday night indicted former ISRO chief G Madhavan Nair and three other senior scientists, who were barred from holding any

PTI Updated on: February 05, 2012 11:13 IST
madhavan nair 3 other scientists indicted for antrix devas
madhavan nair 3 other scientists indicted for antrix devas deal

Bangalore, Feb 5: A committee set up by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Saturday night indicted former ISRO chief G Madhavan Nair and three other senior scientists, who were barred from holding any government posts, for acts of commission in Antrix-Devas deal.


The report prepared by a committee headed by Pratyush Sinha, former Chief Vigilance Commissioner, said Antrix-Devas deal lacked transparency and recommended that action needs to be taken against Nair, A Bhaskaranarayana, K R Sridhara Murthi and K N Shankara all of whom have retired.

The Antrix is the commercial arm of ISRO and Devas is a private firm.

The five-member high level team, which was set up to examine the deal and identify the acts of omission and commission by government officials, said in its report made public tonight  that “...there have not only been serious administrative and procedural lapses but also suggestion of collusive behaviour on the part of certain individuals and accordingly, responsibilities have to be fixed for taking action”.

The Pratyush Sinha committee, set up on May 31 last year to examine the deal and identify the acts of omission and commission by government officials, said choosing Devas for the deal “seems to be lacking in transparency and due diligence”.

It said “the approval process (for the deal) was riddled with incomplete and inaccurate information given to the union cabinet and the Space Commission”.

While the Antrix-Devas agreement was signed on January, 28, 2005, “this fact was not disclosed to the Space Commission or in the Cabinet note dated November 27, 2005, in which approval was sought for the launch of GSAT 6, one of the satellites to be build under the agreement”. 

The report said the terms of Antrix-Devas contract “were heavily loaded in favour of Devas”.

It pointed out that terms of the agreement entail that while in the case of the failure of the satellite, the risk was entirely that of Department of Space, the success of of the satellite would commit the latter to substantial expenditure”.

Secondly, it said “it is surprising that for the purpose of arbitration Devas has been considered an international customer even though its registered address in the contract is shown as in Bangalore”.

The report also noted that no clearance was obtained from the legal cells of the Department of Space and the Finance Ministry for Antrix-Devas deal, as is mandatory for any international agreement by any department of Indian government.

The report also said GSAT capacity was earmarked for Devas without consulting INSAT Corporation Committee (ICC), which recommends use of satellite capacities by non-government users authorized to provide telecom services, which is a “clear violation of the government policy”.

The committee report said “there is evidence to suggest that the Antrix-Devas agreement was not disclosed to Technical Advisory Group (TAG) at the time of considering the experimental trials”.

There is no indication of any attempt to identify other possible partners for providing the same service even though similar services were available in some other countries, said the report.

“Although SATCOM policy and ICC guidelines allow leasing of satellite capacity on first-come-first-served basis, this did not prevent Antrix-ISRO from following a transparent process of adequately publicising its intent of supporting such services...” it said.

“In the absence of such a declaration of intent, choosing Devas seems to be lacking in transparency and due diligence”, added the report.

The committee report said in the cabinet not, however, “an erroneous impression was sought to be created that ISRO was in receipt of several firm expressions of interest by service providers for the utilization of satellite capacity on commercial terms”.

“This appears to be deliberate as the existence of the agreement was not disclosed even when seeking approval later of the Space Commission for the GSAT 6A satellite.”

The committee also proposes action against four other scientists S S Meenakshisundaram, Veena Rao, G Balachadran and R G Nadadur “who have been found responsible for the acts of ommissions by not paying enough attention to details and not ensuring that the various notes that were put up for decision to the competent authorities included all necessary details and had undergone various necessary consultative processes”.

Prior to the setting up of Pratyush Sinha Committee, the government had on February 10, 2011, set up the High Powered Review Committee with B K Chaturvedi and Roddam Narasimha as members to review the technical, commercial, procedural and financial aspects of the Antrix-Devas agreement of January 2005.

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