>The points raised above need to be viewed together to appreciate the fact
that the political party in power at the Centre has spread its control far
and wide, deliberately as a part of a well-orchestrated strategy, to
disempower the ECI, obfuscate the issue of technically established flaws in
the EVM system so as to ensure that those flaws continue to taint the
electoral system to its own advantage, plant its nominees on the Boards of
BEL and ECIL which manufacture and supply the EVMs and which hold the
source code embedded in the EVM chips, render election funding opaque and
tilt it totally to give itself a defining advantage over other political
parties, run counter to the direction issued by the apex court to SBI to
make an immediate public disclosure of the details of the Electoral Bonds
and *plant a BJP representative on SBI’s Board to involve the party in
managing SBI’s affairs*."

-----------------------------------
By: Dr. E.A.S. Sarma, Former Secretary to the Government of India
Published in: *Countercurrents*
Date: March 7, 2024
Source:
https://countercurrents.org/2024/03/letter-to-president-of-india-non-transparency-of-funding-through-electoral-bonds-appointment-of-political-nominees-on-the-boards-of-sbi-bel-ecil-and-violating-norms-of-appointment-of-election-comm/

------------------------

To

Smt. Droupadi Murmu

Hon’ble President of India

Respected Rashtrapati Ji,

I wish to place before you certain distressing facts revolving around a
well-orchestrated strategy of the ruling political party at the Centre that
tend to vitiate the integrity of the electoral process, tilting the
level-playing ground in favour of the political party in power at the
Centre.

Openly infringing the norms of transparency and objectivity stipulated by
the Supreme Court, the ruling political party has introduced a legislation
that reduces the Election Commission of India (ECI) to the status of a body
subordinate to the political executive. By planting BJP’s representatives
in the Boards of Bharat Electronics Ltd (BEL) and Electronics Corporation
of India Ltd (ECIL) which manufacture and supply Electronic Voting Machine
(EVM) systems and are privy to the source code embedded in the EVM systems,
the political executive has ensured that BEL’s and ECIL’s affairs are
managed subject to BJP’s oversight. Despite experts’ pointing out that
there are segments in the EVM systems that lend themselves to manipulation,
the Commission has chosen to ignore those concerns, perhaps reluctant to go
against the political executive’s views. To give itself an undue advantage
in receiving private corporate donations, the ruling political executive
has introduced multiple statutory amendments to allow the corporates to
give unlimited donations, allow even foreign agencies to give political
donations and ensure total anonymity of donors by introducing a highly
contentious Electoral Bonds Scheme (EBS) operated by the State Bank of
India (SBI). To ensure that the SBI functions subject to oversight by the
BJP, the political executive has additionally planted at least one
representative of the BJP on SBI’s Board.

When the Supreme Court held the EBS to be violative of the Constitution and
directed the SBI to make a public disclosure forthwith of the details of
the EBS including the details of the donors and sources of funding, instead
of allowing the SBI to comply with the apex court’s stipulation, the
political executive has evidently pressured the SBI to delay the disclosure
till the end of June by which time the elections will be over.

Let me explain these facts in more detail, referring to the correspondence
that I have had on the subject, with no response from the concerned
authorities:

   1.  The apex court of India held categorically that the existing
   procedure of selection of candidates to be appointed as Election
   Commissioners is not transparent and objective. The court asked the
   government to enact a law that provides for a selection committee with the
   Chief Justice as a member and bring in other changes to ensure that the ECI
   is adequately empowered to function as an independent authority under
   Article 324 of the Constitution. Instead of complying with that advice,
   evidently to keep the Commission under its thumb, the present government at
   the Centre deviated from those norms by getting a legislation hurriedly
   passed by the Parliament to enable the ruling political party at the Centre
   to have total control over the Commission. My letter of 7th November, 2023
   addressed to your office refers (
   
https://countercurrents.org/2023/11/appointment-of-chief-information-commissioner-prima-facie-violation-of-section-123-of-the-rti-act/
   )
   2. I addressed the Election Commission of India (ECI) on the 1st
   February, 2024 pointing out that there are at least four clearly
   identifiable segments of the Electronic Voting Machine (EVM) system in
   which there is scope for manipulation, based on a comprehensive technical
   analysis made by a number of experts. I therefore suggested (i) that the
   configuration of the EVM system be changed to ensure that the electronic
   vote cast by a voter gets directly registered in the VVPAT to generate a
   paper trail, without having to go through the control unit, (ii) that those
   four segments be brought under the oversight of all political parties to
   allow them to detect manipulation, if any, and (iii) that a 100% count of
   the paper trail of electronically cast votes be ordered to enhance the
   public trust in the electoral process (
   
https://thewire.in/government/take-expert-opinion-on-evms-safety-implement-safeguards-e-a-s-sarma-to-election-commission).
   The ECI has not so far acted on my suggestions. When a senior delegation of
   opposition party representatives wanted to call on the ECI on that subject,
   for reasons best known to it, the Commission refused to meet them.
   This shows that the Commission is unable to function in a transparent
   manner, free itself from the shackles of executive control, raising doubts
   about its ability to discharge the responsibilities envisaged in Article
   324 for conducting elections in a free and fair manner.
   3. Two premier CPSEs, namely, Bharat Electronics Ltd (BEL) and
   Electronics Corporation of India Ltd (ECIL), are entrusted with the
   responsibility of manufacturing EVMs and supplying them to the ECI. They
   are privy to the confidential source code of the chips embedded in the
   EVMs. The ECI is unwilling to subject the same to an independent technical
   audit to enhance the public trust despite a demand for the same by
   political parties and the civil society. Meanwhile, it came to light that
   the BJP which is in power at the Centre has appointed its party
   representatives as “independent directors” of BEL and ECIL suggesting that
   those appointments were deliberate meant to involve the party directly in
   managing the afairs of the two CPSEs. In my letter of 26th of January, 2024
   addressed to the ECI (
   
https://countercurrents.org/2023/03/election-commission-of-india-must-question-the-presence-political-nominees-on-bels-and-ecils-boards/),
   I brought this fact to the notice of the ECI seeking its intervention to
   free the two CPSEs from political interference but the Commission, hesitant
   to displease the political executive, has chosen not to act on my
   suggestion, despite the fact that such political interference in the
   functioning of the two CPSEs vitiates the perceived sanctity of electronic
   voting and dilutes the public trust in the electoral process
   4. Despite public protests, the ruling political executive at the Centre
   introduced far reaching amendments, some regressively retrospective, to the
   Companies Act, the Foreign Contributions (Regulation) Act etc. to (i) relax
   the upper limits to private company donations to political parties, (ii)
   allow political donations from even foreign sources to fill the coffers of
   the political parties and (iii) introduce total opacity in electoral
   funding by private companies and agencies through a contentious Electoral
   Bonds scheme, which the apex court has recently held to be illegal. These
   amendments benefitted the ruling political party far more than the other
   political parties, as the former is in a position to grant *quid pro
   quos* to private companies and even possibly intimidate them. Such
   corporate donations have not only upset the level-playing ground against
   the parties in opposition but also placed the ordinary voters and
   individual candidates contesting elections without such financial support
   at a disadvantage. Moreover, foreign political donations hurt the national
   interest. The large amount of funding received by the ruling party at the
   Centre has thus given an undue advantage to it vis-a-vis the other
   political parties, adversely affecting the fairness of the electoral
   process. My article accessible at (
   
https://thewire.in/politics/fcra-reviving-lapsed-law-amending-retrospectively-trumps-ethical-legal-barriers)
   indicates the details of some of the regressive legislative amendments
   referred above. In addition, my letters dated 2nd March 2024 and 6th March,
   2024 addressed to the ECI also refer (accessible at
   
https://countercurrents.org/2024/03/the-eci-should-not-only-freeze-all-amounts-received-by-political-parties-through-the-electoral-bonds-scheme-but-also-force-the-sbi-to-disclose-the-details-immediately-failing-which-the-commission-sho/
   )
   5. While holding the Electoral Bonds Scheme to be Constitutionally
   invalid, the apex court has directed the State Bank of India (SBI) to make
   a complete disclosure of the details of the Bonds issued, the details of
   the donors and the sources of funding immediately to the Election
   Commission. Meanwhile, it is reported that there are large amounts received
   by and lying with some political parties, especially the BJP, through
   Electoral Bonds, which they are likely to use in the ensuing elections,
   though according to the apex court, such donations are illegal. The ruling
   party at the Centre being the largest beneficiary of the scheme continues
   to be at an advantage compared to the other political parties, which in
   itself vitiates the sanctity of the electoral process. In my two letters
   cited (accessible at
   
https://countercurrents.org/2024/03/the-eci-should-not-only-freeze-all-amounts-received-by-political-parties-through-the-electoral-bonds-scheme-but-also-force-the-sbi-to-disclose-the-details-immediately-failing-which-the-commission-sho/),
   I appealed to the ECI to freeze all such amounts so as to ensure that a
   level-playing ground is maintained among the different political parties.
   Till date, the ECI has not acted on my letters, suggesting once again its
   inability and unwillingness to displease the ruling political party.
   6. It has since been reported that the SBI has expressed its inability
   to make a public disclosure of the details of the Electoral Bonds it has
   issued within the tight time frame stipulated by the apex court and
   requested the court to grant it extension of time till the end of June this
   year. Considering that the SBI boasts about the extent to which it has
   digitised its databases, it is nothing but a ploy on the part of the SBI to
   please the political executive and delay the disclosure. It indirectly
   implies that the SBI would not make the disclosure till the ensuing
   elections are over, a situation that has raised serious concerns about the
   motives underlying the request and the possibility of the ruling political
   party indirectly pressuring the SBI not to make a clean disclosure of the
   details of Electoral Bonds, for reasons best known to it. In my two letters
   cited, I requested the Commission to invoke its authority under Article 324
   of the Constitution to (i) force the SBI to make the necessary disclosure
   immediately, if necessary, by imposing an exemplary deterrent penalty on it
   and (ii) to make a public announcement that the Commission would not
   initiate work on the ensuing elections till the SBI makes such a
   disclosure. To the best of my knowledge, the Commission is yet to act on
   this, leading one to infer that the line of distinction between the
   Commission as an independent Constitutional authority and the political
   executive is fast disappearing.
   7. It is significant that the ruling political executive is exercising
   control over the functioning of the SBI through the Directors nominated by
   it on SBI’s Board. While many of those nominees are under the direct
   administrative control of the political executive, *at least one of the
   nominee Directors is a member of the BJP itself, a fact that blurs the
   distinction between the BJP as a political party and the senior management
   team of the SBI*. This clearly shows that the BJP through the ruling
   political executive at the Centre has unabashedly made sure that every CPSE
   that is related in one way or the other with the conduct of elections
   remains under its oversight, a situation that should cause worry to all
   those interested in upholding the democratic values of our Constitution and
   the need to keep the electoral process above politics.
   8. Many of the CPSEs referred above are listed in the national stock
   exchanges and they are subject to Clause 49 of the Listing Agreement
   prescribed by the SEBI. According to the Listing requirement, each one of
   those CPSEs should have a minimum number of “independent” directors. A
   person nominated by the government, according to SEBI’s definition of the
   term, cannot be deemed to be an “independent” Director. The representatives
   of the BJP nominated by the political executive as Directors on the Boards
   of the above cited listed CPSEs cannot therefore be deemed to be
   independent directors. In other words, all such CPSEs stand in violation of
   the relevant SEBI regulation, rendering the functioning of the Boards of
   those CPSEs and the decisions taken by them *prima facie* illegal.
   Though I have brought this to the notice of the authorities in the Ministry
   of Corporate Affairs which has the obligation to regulate companies under
   the Companies Act read with the relevant SEBI regulation, the latter has
   chosen not to act, evidently under pressure from the political executive.
   My letter of February 6 2024 refers (
   
https://countercurrents.org/2024/02/some-independent-directors-of-electronic-voting-machine-manufacturers-bel-are-related-to-bjp/
   )

The points raised above need to be viewed together to appreciate the fact
that the political party in power at the Centre has spread its control far
and wide, deliberately as a part of a well-orchestrated strategy, to
disempower the ECI, obfuscate the issue of technically established flaws in
the EVM system so as to ensure that those flaws continue to taint the
electoral system to its own advantage, plant its nominees on the Boards of
BEL and ECIL which manufacture and supply the EVMs and which hold the
source code embedded in the EVM chips, render election funding opaque and
tilt it totally to give itself a defining advantage over other political
parties, run counter to the direction issued by the apex court to SBI to
make an immediate public disclosure of the details of the Electoral Bonds
and *plant a BJP representative on SBI’s Board to involve the party in
managing SBI’s affairs. *

These are matters on which anyone interested in protecting the democratic
character of our Constitution should feel deeply concerned and act quickly
to do everything towards upholding the Constitution and the integrity of
the electoral process.

Rashtrapatiji, considering that the political executive has not hesitated
to ignore the wise and prudent advice/ directions given by the Supreme
Court time and again, in order to maintain itself in power at the Centre
and in the States in several ways as indicated above, I appeal to you to
intervene urgently by making a reference to the Supreme Court for
advice/action under Article 143 on

(i) whether the Supreme Court should make a *suo moto* intervention to
secure compliance with its own orders cited above, and

(ii) the lines on which the high office of the President of India can act,
to protect the Constitution and the democratic character of it

Respectfully,

E A S Sarma

Former Secretary to the Government of India

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