Business Standard

Encash poll bonds or money goes to PM Relief Fund

- SOMESH JHA

Electoral bonds, launched by the central government for making anonymous donations to political parties, can bepurchase­dby cheque, demand draft, and electronic transfer from 53 of the more than 24,000 branches of State Bank of India (SBI) in the country, according to a notificati­on.

If political parties fail to encash their bonds within 15 days of the purchase, they may lose the donation to the Prime Minister’s National Relief Fund, the government has said.

The bonds can be purchased by individual­s, companies, non-government organisati­ons, trusts, and a group of people without making a public disclosure.

The purchaser will have to submit his or her permanent account number details, but need not require to give know-your-customer (KYC) details unless the bonds purchased are worth more than ~50,000.

The bonds will not carry the name of the person buying them. Bonds can be purchased in the capitals of all the states, and Union territorie­s.

However, two branches of SBI each in Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisga­rh, Gujarat, Jammu & Kashmir, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, and West Bengal are authorised to sell bonds. In Uttar Pradesh three additional branches, and in Maharashtr­a and Telangana two more branches, apart from the ones in their capitals, will sell electoral bonds.

“The informatio­n furnished by the buyer shall be treated confidenti­al by the authorised bank and shall not be disclosed to any authority for any purposes, except when demanded by a competent court or upon registrati­on of criminal case by any law enforcemen­t agency,” the notificati­on issued by the Ministry of Finance on January 2 said.

The notificati­on also makes it clear that an applicatio­n to purchase electoral bonds, which can be made online also, will be rejected if the KYC

documents — the voter ID, passport, or Aadhaar — are not submitted by the purchaser under the present Reserve Bank of India policy.

Political parties registered under the Representa­tion of the People Act, 1951, and have secured at least one per cent votes polled in the last Lok Sabha or Assembly elections will be eligible to receive the bond, keeping the new political parties out of its ambit.

The bonds will be an interest-free debt instrument, resembling promissory notes, and can be purchased in the multiples of ~1,000, ~10,000, ~100,000, ~1 million, and ~10 million. They can be purchased “either singly or jointly with other individual­s”.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley had announced the move to float electoral bonds in the 2017-18 Budget last year.

“The element of transparen­cy is that the balance sheet of donors will reflect that they have bought a certain amount of bonds, and political parties will also file their returns (to the Election Commission) that will reflect the extent of electoral bonds received,” Jaitley had said in the Lok Sabha on Tuesday. The finance minister had said a large portion of the source of political funding was undisclose­d at present because most donations were made in cash. Last year, the government had reduced the limit of cash donations to political parties to ~2,000 from ~20,000.

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