Khaleej Times

Political parties hit by TV and funding clampdown

-

$150m Received by BJP as donation in 2018, according to ADR

new delhi — India’s Supreme Court on Friday ordered parties to name anonymous donors behind tens of millions of dollars in funding as hostilitie­s intensifie­d in the country’s mega-election.

The order came ahead of the second round of voting and after the election watchdog called for a clampdown on Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s personal television channel, saying it breached campaign rules.

While Modi and his opposition rival Rahul Gandhi returned to the campaign trail, the country’s top court gave parties seven weeks to name people who have bought “electoral bonds” in recent months.

Rival parties are said to be spending up to $7 billion on the election, which started on Thursday and runs through to May 19, and funding sources have come under the spotlight. The bonds — bought for between $15 and $140,000 and then given to a designated party — are controvers­ial because they are anonymous.

Election commission and watchdog groups which took the case to the Supreme Court said the bonds should be ended because of the risk of businesses making secret contributi­ons to influence decisions.

Modi’s government, which introduced the bonds in 2017, opposed naming donors. The ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is the biggest beneficiar­y of the bonds, according to the Associatio­n for Democratic Reforms (ADR), one of the groups behind the case.

More than $150 million in bonds were bought in 2018, according to the Factly Indian data journalism portal. Experts estimate that at least the same amount was bought in the months ahead of the election.

According to the ADR, the BJP — the world’s biggest political party — received about $150 million in total donations in 2018, of which more than half came from anonymous sources. Congress brought in about $30 million and about 60 percent was anonymous.

The prime minister, who won a landslide in 2014 and is considered frontrunne­r in this race, faced increased pressure after the election commission said his NaMo TV breached campaign rules.

The commission ordered NaMo TV, which is sponsored by the BJP, to submit all of its content for approval. Under Indian election rules, any content deemed campaign material — including adverts, films and even social media — needs permission from the independen­t watchdog.

NaMo TV shows 24-hour programmes on Modi rallies, speeches, and even rap songs and dance routines devoted to the normally austere leader. It was being broadcast as normal on Friday. The order was the commission’s second blow to the Modi campaign in 48 hours, after it postponed the release of a flattering movie about the 68-year-old prime minister until after voting finishes.

Producers of the film insisted they had no links to the BJP. But the commission said the film “PM Narendra Modi”, which tells of the Hindu nationalis­t leader’s ascent from selling tea at a train station to prime minister, could not be released during the election.

Modi and Gandhi kept up their punishing schedule of rallies ahead of the next vote on April 18. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates