Millennium Post

Donations through poll bonds: SBI refuses to share details

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: The State Bank of India (SBI) has refused to disclose details of buyers of electoral bonds, political parties which have redeemed these and the bank’s reports sent to the government on their sales, calling it personal informatio­n held by it in fiduciary capacity exempted from disclosure, an RTI response shows.

The details provided by the bank shows that in March 2018, it sold bonds worth over Rs 222 crore while in April the number dipped to Rs 114.9 crore.

Mumbai saw maximum enthusiasm among donors to purchase electoral bonds with Rs 122 crore of bonds being sold from the SBI main branch in the maximum city while in April it saw sales of Rs 53 crore, it said.

Activist Venkatesh Nayak, who filed the RTI applicatio­n, contested the response of the SBI stating that denial of informatio­n about buyers of electoral bonds and receiving political parties is “patently erroneous”.

“The CPIO is treating both the buyers of EBS and the political parties as being in a “fiduciary relationsh­ip” with SBI! This is in complete violation of the Master Circular issued by the Reserve Bank of India regarding the basis of customer confidenti­ality. Para #25 of the July 2015 Master Circular,” he said.

The master circular said the scope of the secrecy law in India has generally followed the common law principles based on implied contract.

“The bankers’ obligation to maintain secrecy arises out of the contractua­l relationsh­ip between the banker and customer, and as such no informatio­n should be divulged to third parties except under circumstan­ces which are well defined,” it said.

Nayak said when the SBI is in a contractua­l relationsh­ip with its customers, according to the RBI Master Circular, its CPIO cannot claim the protection of “fiduciary” connection which is a trust-based relationsh­ip and has nothing to do with the banking business.

“This position has been clearly explained by the Supreme Court of India. More importantl­y, when the Finance Minister has repeatedly said that EB scheme is ‘engineered’ to make political party funding more transparen­t, then, is there not a duty to the public to disclose? Nayak said.

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