Nitin Sethi: Govt Announces New Round Of Electoral Bonds Just In Time For Delhi Elections
Reports show the BJP
raised Rs2,410 crore ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, of which 60% was
through electoral bonds. Read the
six-part #PaisaPolitics series
by Nitin Sethi, published by Huffpost India, here — Part
1, Part 2, Part
3, Part
4, Part
5 and Part
6.
The finance ministry
said on Thursday that sale of the 13th tranche of electoral bonds will
take place from January 13 to January 22, just days after the Election
Commission
announced the dates for Delhi elections. “State Bank of India
(SBI), in the XIII phase of sale, has been authorised to issue and encash
electoral bonds through its 29 authorised branches from January 13, 2020, to
January 22, 2020,” the ministry said in a statement. Delhi will go to polls on February 8 and results will
be announced on February 11.
HuffPost
India’s series on electoral bonds by Nitin Sethi, published in
November last year, revealed how Narendra Modi’s PMO directed the finance ministry to
break its own rules to approve an unscheduled and illegal sale of electoral
bonds for state assembly elections on two separate occasions. These
elections — Karnataka, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Mizoram, Rajasthan and
Telangana — were the last round of polls before the Modi government’s first
tenure ended.
In the first ever sale and donation of bonds in March 2018, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had garnered 95% of all political donations made through this particular funding channel, the party’s annual report showed. On Friday, The Economic Times and others reported that the BJP raised Rs2,410 crore ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, of which 60% was through electoral bonds.
In the first ever sale and donation of bonds in March 2018, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) had garnered 95% of all political donations made through this particular funding channel, the party’s annual report showed. On Friday, The Economic Times and others reported that the BJP raised Rs2,410 crore ahead of the 2019 Lok Sabha elections, of which 60% was through electoral bonds.
Sethi’s series, which
was based on documents accessed by transparency activist Commodore Lokesh Batra
(Retd), also detailed how the Narendra Modi government overruled the objections of the Reserve Bank of
India (RBI) and the Election
Commission. It also revealed the government’s claim that bond donors are completely anonymous
was a lie. SBI maintains a secret number-based record of donors who buy
electoral bonds, and the political parties they donate to.
The HuffPost
India series also established that the government lied that donors requested anonymity due to
fear of political retribution. While BJP members have often said that donors
asked for anonymity, the finance ministry admitted that no donor ever told the
government to create an opaque system of funding political parties. This week, the Central
Information Commission (CIC) asked the government to reveal the names
of those who requested that donors who bought electoral bonds remain anonymous.
The CIC also issued showcause notices to the department of economic affairs,
financial services, revenue and the Election Commission regarding an RTI
application filed by activist Venkatesh Nayak.