Delhi/Dehradun, Jan 30 (IANS) The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) Monday slammed the government over the blacklisting of former ISRO chief G. Madhavan Nair and questioned the ‘silence’ of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi on the issue.

Talking to reporters in the national capital, party spokesperson Nirmala Sitharaman said the prime minister should answer as he directly holds the charge of ISRO.

‘The prime minister needs to answer… What happened to the report of the high-level probe ordered by the prime minister,’ Sitharaman asked.

She also linked the issue with other corruption cases.

‘The Prime Minister’s Office has got a lot of things to answer especially on ISRO-Devas deal,’ she said.

‘The PMO has a lot of things to answer why Shunglu Committee has remained on paper. The PMO has to say why, in spite of briefing him, Raja is being questioned and not Mr Chidambaram. The PMO is remaining silent,’ Sitharaman added.

The party’s national spokesperson Tarun Vijay also accused the government of having lost its ‘grace to govern’.

‘The unsavoury controversy involving senior scientists from ISRO is seriously damaging the reputation of one of India’s best and highly respected institutions, of which the country has always been proud,’ Vijay said.

‘The ISRO controversy, blacklisting of top scientists who had given their best in terms of scientific achievement and then again sending signals to rethink on the decision, gives a clear signal that this government has lost all sense of balance and grace to govern the country,’ Vijay said.

Vijay also slammed the government and the defence ministry for its stand on the age row surrounding Army chief Gen. V.K. Singh.

‘The government has failed to uphold the constitutional principles of law, justice and fairness and is systematically ruining the institutions that have held the basic foundations of the constitution high,’ Vijay said.

Former ISRO chief G. Madhavan Nair and three other top scientists were blacklisted by the government for their alleged role in the $300 million (Rs.60 crore) spectrum deal between Antrix and the Bangalore-based Devas Multimedia Ltd in violation of rules, including competitive bidding through a global tender.

Antrix is the commercial arm of ISRO. Besides Nair, the other scientists indicted include former scientific secretary A. Bhaskarnarayana, ISRO’s former satellite centre director K.N. Shankara and former Antrix Corporation executive director K.R. Sridharamurthi.