On March 14, the Election Commission published on its website the data received from the State Bank of India (SBI) about electoral bonds, following a Supreme Court directive to release the information before March 15. The EC in a statement said it had âuploaded the data on electoral bonds on its website as received from the SBI on âas is where is basisâ in furtherance of disclosure and transparency. Examine the full list of donors and recipient political parties here. The single largest donor on the list is Future Gaming and Hotel Services PR, which donated a cumulative sum of â¹1,368 crores via electoral bonds to political parties between April 12, 2019 and January 24, 2024. The firm, headed by lottery magnate Santiago Martin, had recently been under the scanner of the Enforcement Directorate. The ED attached â¹411 crore in the bank accounts of this firm, among others, in March 2022. On September 9, 2023, it was also subject to a prosecution complaint by the ED under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 before the PMLA Court, Kolkata. From among parties, the Bharatiya Janata Party saw the lionâs share of electoral bonds encashed by partiesâ worth â¹6,060.5 crore and amounting to 47.5% of the total bonds encashed by all parties. This was followed by the AIl India Trinamool Congress, which received â¹1,609.50 crore, amounting to 12.6% of the total. The Indian National Congress received â¹1,421.9 crore or 11.1% of the total. The Bharat Rashtra Samithi (9.5%), Biju Janata Dal (6.1%), and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (5%) also encashed more than â¹500 crore worth of electoral bonds during this period. Overall, electoral bonds worth over â¹12,155 crore were purchased by donors and more than â¹12,769 crore were encashed by parties during the same timeframe. 22 firms were noted to have donated more than â¹100 crore. Second on the list was Hyderabad-based Megha Engineering and Infrastructures Limited (MEIL), which donated â¹966 crore. The Western UP Power Transmission Company, also part of the MEIL group of companies, donated â¹220 crore. The top 10 was rounded off by Qwik Supply Chain (â¹410 crore), Haldia Energy (â¹377 crore), Vedanta (â¹375.65 crore), Essel Mining and Industries (â¹224.45 crore), Bharti Airtel (â¹198 crore), and Keventer Foodpark Infra (â¹195 crore). Others making major electoral bonds purchases were Grasim Industries, Piramal Enterprises, Torrent Power, DLF Commercial Developers, Apollo Tyres, Lakshmi Mittal, Edelweiss, PVR, Sula Wine, Welspun, and Sun Pharma. Information uploaded on the EC website showed that the SBI shared two tranches of data, one set with the name of the purchaser of each electoral bond, the date of purchase, and the denomination of the bond; and the other set with the name of the political party, date and denomination of bonds encashed. The data provided by the SBI does not include the serial numbers of the bonds. On March 15, the Supreme Court issued a notice to SBI questioning why details of these unique alphanumeric numbers identifying individual electoral bonds were not handed over to the ECI for publication. The case has now been listed for March 18. The top court has said that it will scan and digitise the documents given by the ECI and return the originals by 5 p.m. on Saturday. The ECI had sought the return of the documents pertaining to electoral bonds given confidentially to the Court in a sealed cover and sealed boxes in compliance with two orders on April 12, 2019 and November 2, 2023. It said it had not retained copies of these documents. The Hinduâs Editorials Inevitable collapse: On the BJP-JJP coalition in Haryana Square one: On the 2024 U.S. Presidential election as a Biden-Trump rematch The Hinduâs Daily News Quiz Which State has rejected the Centreâs fund to meet their financial crunch? Kerala Karnataka Tamil Nadu Jharkhand [logo] Editor's Pick 15 March 2024 [The Hindu logo] In the Editor's Pick newsletter, The Hindu explains why a story was important enough to be carried on the front page of today's edition of our newspaper. [Arrow]Open in browser
[Mail icon]More newsletters SBI poll bonds: BJP gets largest share, 22 firms donate over 100 crore On March 14, the [Election Commission published on its website]( the data received from the State Bank of India (SBI) about electoral bonds, following a Supreme Court directive to release the information before March 15. The EC in a statement said it had âuploaded the data on electoral bonds on its website as [received from the SBI on âas is where is basisâ]( furtherance of disclosure and transparency. Examine the [full list of donors and recipient]( political parties here. The single largest donor on the list is [Future Gaming and Hotel Services PR]( which donated a cumulative sum of â¹1,368 crores via electoral bonds to political parties between April 12, 2019 and January 24, 2024. The firm, headed by lottery magnate Santiago Martin, had recently been under the scanner of the Enforcement Directorate. The ED attached â¹411 crore in the bank accounts of this firm, among others, in March 2022. On September 9, 2023, it was also subject to a prosecution complaint by the ED under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 before the PMLA Court, Kolkata. From among parties, the Bharatiya Janata Party saw the lionâs share of electoral bonds encashed by partiesâ worth â¹6,060.5 crore and amounting to 47.5% of the total bonds encashed by all parties. This was followed by the AIl India Trinamool Congress, which received â¹1,609.50 crore, amounting to 12.6% of the total. The Indian National Congress received â¹1,421.9 crore or 11.1% of the total. The Bharat Rashtra Samithi (9.5%), Biju Janata Dal (6.1%), and Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (5%) also encashed more than â¹500 crore worth of electoral bonds during this period. Overall, electoral bonds worth over â¹12,155 crore were purchased by donors and more than â¹12,769 crore were encashed by parties during the same timeframe. 22 firms were noted to have donated more than â¹100 crore. Second on the list was Hyderabad-based Megha Engineering and Infrastructures Limited (MEIL), which donated â¹966 crore. The Western UP Power Transmission Company, also part of the MEIL group of companies, donated â¹220 crore. The top 10 was rounded off by Qwik Supply Chain (â¹410 crore), Haldia Energy (â¹377 crore), Vedanta (â¹375.65 crore), Essel Mining and Industries (â¹224.45 crore), Bharti Airtel (â¹198 crore), and Keventer Foodpark Infra (â¹195 crore). Others making major electoral bonds purchases were Grasim Industries, Piramal Enterprises, Torrent Power, DLF Commercial Developers, Apollo Tyres, Lakshmi Mittal, Edelweiss, PVR, Sula Wine, Welspun, and Sun Pharma. Information uploaded on the EC website showed that the SBI shared two tranches of data, one set with the name of the purchaser of each electoral bond, the date of purchase, and the denomination of the bond; and the other set with the name of the political party, date and denomination of bonds encashed. The data provided by the SBI does not include the serial numbers of the bonds. On March 15, the [Supreme Court issued a notice to SBI questioning why details of these unique]( alphanumeric numbers identifying individual electoral bonds were not handed over to the ECI for publication. The case has now been listed for March 18. The top court has said that it will scan and digitise the documents given by the ECI and return the originals by 5 p.m. on Saturday. The ECI had [sought the return of the documents]( pertaining to electoral bonds given confidentially to the Court in a sealed cover and sealed boxes in compliance with two orders on April 12, 2019 and November 2, 2023. It said it had not retained copies of these documents. The Hinduâs Editorials [Arrow][Inevitable collapse: On the BJP-JJP coalition in Haryana](
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