Electoral bonds: SC rejects SBI's plea for time extension
A five-judge Constitution bench directed State Bank of India to furnish the details of electoral bonds to the Election Commission by close of business hours on 12 March
PTI
New Delhi, 11 March
A five-judge Constitution bench of
the Supreme Court on Monday dismissed the State Bank of India's plea seeking
extension of time and directed it to furnish the details of electoral bonds to
the Election Commission by close of business hours on 12 March.
A bench headed by Chief Justice DY
Chandrachud also directed the EC to publish the details shared by the bank on
its official website by 5pm on 15 March.
During the hearing, the bench, also
comprising Justices Sanjiv Khanna, BR Gavai, JB Pardiwala, and Manoj Misra,
took note of the submissions of senior advocate Harish Salve, appearing for the
SBI, that more time was needed for collating the details and matching them as
the information were kept in two different silos with its branches.
He further said if the matching
exercise is to be done away with, the SBI can complete the exercise within
three weeks. The bench said it had not directed the SBI to match the details of
donors and donee with other information. The SBI has to just open the sealed
cover, collate the details and give the information to the Election Commission,
the apex court said. It also asked the bank about the steps taken by it for
complying with the directions given by the apex court in its 15 February judgment.
"In the last 26 days, what
steps have you taken? Your application is silent on that," the bench said.
It asked the SBI to do a "plain disclosure" as per the court's
judgment.
In a landmark verdict delivered on 15
February, a five-judge Constitution bench scrapped the Centre's electoral bonds
scheme that allowed anonymous political funding, calling it
"unconstitutional" and ordered disclosure by the Election Commission
of donors, the amount donated by them and the recipients by 13 March. The SBI
had sought an extension till 30 June to disclose the details of each electoral
bond encashed by political parties before the scheme was scrapped. A separate
plea, seeking initiation of contempt action against the SBI, was also heard by
the bench.
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