Khaleej Times

Modi warns of ‘black money’ in political funding

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A Supreme Court decision to scrap a controvers­ial political funding system has pushed contributi­ons to parties towards "black money", or illegal funds, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said in remarks broadcast on Monday.

India's top court in February scrapped as unconstitu­tional a seven-year-old election funding system through instrument­s called "electoral bonds" that allowed individual­s and companies to make unlimited and anonymous donations to political parties.

Corporate funding of political parties is a sensitive matter in India and, while there is no suggestion that the funds from the bonds scheme were improper, opposition parties allege that Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) used its powers to coerce funding. In his most detailed defence of the scrapped system days before India begins voting in a general election, Modi denied the accusation­s and said companies had also donated to the opposition. He said the system was more transparen­t than previous ones, but added that there was room for policy improvemen­t.

"In decision-making, we learn and improve. It is very possible to improve in this too. But today we have completely pushed the country towards black money," Modi said in an interview to news agency ANI, in which Reuters has a minority stake.

"And that is why I say everyone will regret it. When they will think honestly, everyone will regret it."

Data released on orders of the Supreme Court in March showed Modi's BJP was the largest beneficiar­y of the scrapped system.

The BJP received half of the total bonds sold worth 165 billion rupees ($1.98 billion) between January 2018 and February 2024, the data showed.

Modi also rubbished allegation­s that his party uses agencies such as the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED), India's financial crime-fighting agency, to target opposition leaders for political gains in elections.

"The country should understand that political leaders are involved in only 3 per cent of the ED cases and 97 per cent of cases are registered against the ones who do not belong to politics," he said. "Shouldn't we let the ED work independen­tly when it is supposed to do so?"

 ?? — AFP ?? Prime Minister Modi speaks after releasing the Bharatiya Janata Party’s manifesto ahead of country’s upcoming general elections in New Delhi.
— AFP Prime Minister Modi speaks after releasing the Bharatiya Janata Party’s manifesto ahead of country’s upcoming general elections in New Delhi.

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