Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

In 5 yrs, most number of electoral bonds sold in Mumbai, shows data

- Deeksha Bhardwaj letters@hindustant­imes.com

In terms of sheer numbers and value, most electoral bonds sold since the introducti­on of the scheme five years ago have been in Mumbai, followed by Kolkata and Hyderabad, with the highest amount being enchased in Delhi, an analysis of the data acquired using the Right to Informatio­n Act has revealed.

A total of over ₹10,700 crore worth of electoral bonds have been sold so far to political parties.

Mumbai accounted for 25.4% of the total electoral bonds sold by value at over ₹2,742 crore. In the city, bonds worth ₹194.1 crore were encashed, which makes the city the sixth-highest in this respect. Kolkata accounted for the second-highest numbers of bonds sold, with a total value of ₹2,387 crore. In terms of bonds encashed, the city stood third with ₹1,022 crore worth bonds encashed.

Hyderabad, with bonds sold worth ₹1,885 crore, accounted for 17.47%, or the third-highest sales by value.

The city stood second in terms of bonds encashed, with a total value of a little over ₹1,384 crore.

Delhi had the fourth-highest amount of electoral bond sales by value, at ₹1,519 crore. But the Capital was where close to two-thirds, by value, of all bonds were encashed: this came to be ₹6,748 crore, or nearly 63% of all bonds encashed. “This happens as electoral bonds are sold in a different part of the country and enchased in different part of the country,”

Commodore Lokesh Batra (retd), who filed the RTI applicatio­n said. “Delhi is the headquarte­r, so mostly the bonds sold elsewhere are enchased here.”

A similar trend is seen in terms of the number (not value) of electoral bonds that have been sold in the last five years. A total of 19,520 bonds have sold so far. In Kolkata, this number was 5,788, which includes bonds worth lower than ₹1 crore value. In Mumbai, 3,870 bonds were sold, followed by Hyderabad with 2,800.

The number of bonds of ₹1 crore denominati­on, the highest value for a single bond, followed the same trend as the total sales by value: Mumbai, Kolkata and Hyderabad were the top three, with 2,643, 2,152 and 1,815 of these sold respective­ly. In Gangtok, Ranchi and Srinagar, not a single electoral bond has been sold, the analysis adds. The ₹1 crore denominati­on accounted for 93.6% of the total bonds sold, followed by the ₹10 lakh bond (6% by value).

The electoral bond scheme, first floated in 2017 and implemente­d in 2018, has since met with criticism for lacking transparen­cy. Those opposed to it have also asserted that a large chunk of the donations has gone to the BJP, the ruling party. In 2019-20, the BJP received over 75% of the electoral bonds, according to the Election Commission data.

The critics have also argued that since the bonds are sold through a government-owned bank there is a possibilit­y that the party in power can find out who is funding their political rivals.

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