Deccan Chronicle

Only probe can prove facts of murky poll bond sales

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The Supreme Court of India struck down the electoral bond scheme finding it violative of the citizen’s fundamenta­l right to informatio­n under Article 19 of the Constituti­on. The informatio­n that has reached the public domain after the State Bank of India, which executed the scheme, handed it over to the Election Commission of India on the orders of the court would indicate that the scheme not only facilitate­d violation of an enabling provision of the Constituti­on but also criminal and anti-corruption laws on governance in this country.

It was legally mandated that no informatio­n on the donors and the recipients of the bonds be kept by the bank but the informatio­n the SBI has passed on to the ECI indicates that there is documentat­ion of their details. This gives the lie to the basic argument of the proponents of the scheme that it was designed in such a way to offer total anonymity, so that it would enable corporates to fund elections without fearing reprisals from the government in power. It now transpires that the bank had held on to the informatio­n, and it is common knowledge that the government

of the day can get access to such informatio­n.

The date of arrest of There are allegation­s of quid pro quo in the purchase an industrial­ist in and donation of the bonds. Reports of the links

between companies buying the bonds and getting the Delhi excise

huge government contracts have already appeared. policy case, his Interestin­gly, they are not limited to one party or turning an approver government. There are also reports of companies in and his availing bail certain sectors of the economy buying them as a cartel to propitiate the powers that be. The possibilit­y of have all links to the

them either getting favours or escaping government purchase of action cannot be ruled out. electoral bonds by The more serious allegation­s about the electoral the firm of which he bonds scheme is that it has been used, along with the

investigat­ing agencies, by the BJP that runs the is a director

Union government as a tool for extortion of money from corporate houses. Reports say a good share of the companies which made most purchase of the bonds, was being investigat­ed by the agencies, including the income tax department, the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) and the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI). It has also been reported that the date of arrest of an industrial­ist in the Delhi excise policy case, his turning approver and his being enlarged on bail have all links to the purchase of electoral bonds by the company of which he is a director. It is interestin­g to note that the Supreme Court, while hearing the bail applicatio­n of former Delhi deputy chief minister Manish Sisodia, had pointed out that all that the ED, which had arrested Mr Sisodia, had against the accused were statements of approvers and nothing else.

The informatio­n that throws light on the possible murky deals behind a scheme which was claimed to be making political funding transparen­t has come out in the open only after the Supreme Court put it its foot down and ordered the SBI to comply with its order. The informatio­n so revealed points to a web of undesirabl­e and even illegal practices that could have a devastatin­g impact on the right to selfdeterm­ination of the people of this republic. The demand of the Congress, the principal Opposition party, for a court-monitored investigat­ion to see if there is truth in the allegation­s of quid pro quo and extortion in the operation of the scheme, therefore, has merit in it.

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