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Death in the Cauvery: Dr Ayyappan and the Chilling Pattern of India's Vanishing Scientists
The Sunday Guardian
|May 18, 2025
On 10 May 2025, the Cauvery River—once a symbol of life and sustenance—became the silent witness to a national disgrace. Floating in its waters was the decomposed body of Padma Shri awardee Dr Subbanna Ayyappan.

The man who gave India its Blue Revolution, who turned fish into food security for millions, met a death so unceremonious, so quietly brushed aside, it should shake the conscience of a country that prides itself on its scientific progress.
But it won't. Because in India, scientists can die, and no one bats an eyelid. A headline here, a quote there, and the matter is closed. Suicide, they say. Depression, they suggest. Move on, they imply. But we shouldn't. Because this isn't just about Dr Ayyappan—it's about a pattern. A chilling, undeniable, shameful pattern. A pattern of how India treats its scientific minds, not as national treasures but as expendables.
Dr Ayyappan wasn't just another bureaucrat in Delhi's corridors of indifference. He was a visionary. The first fisheries scientist to lead the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), he pioneered aquaculture that empowered rural communities, transformed inland fish farming, and elevated India to the status of the second-largest fish-producing country in the world. He was also Secretary of the Department of Agricultural Research and Education (DARE), Vice-Chancellor of Central Agricultural University in Imphal, and Chairman of NABL. The man held every credential that defines national service. Yet when he disappeared, there was no panic. And when his body surfaced in the river, there was no outrage.
Instead, we got the usual state machinery spinning the same old narrative—suicide. No forensic transparency. No suicide note. No institutional accountability. Just a dead man and a hurried explanation.
But this is not the first time India has buried a scientist with its apathy. Over the past 20 years, our country has seen an alarming number of its scientists die under mysterious, suspicious, and uninvestigated circumstances.
And every single time, the establishment has opted for silence. Silence is not absence of noise-it is the loudest cover-up.
This story is from the May 18, 2025 edition of The Sunday Guardian.
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