The Supreme Court today said it will hear in the last week of January a batch of petitions challenging laws permitting funding of political parties through the electoral bond scheme.
A bench of Justices BR Gavai and Vikram Nath said the matter requires to heard.
"This is a 2015 matter. You can't have such an emergency just before the penultimate day of the vacation...There is no election as of now. We will hear it in the last week of January, 2023," the bench said.
Lawyer Prashant Bhushan, appearing for PIL petitioner NGO, 'Association for Democratic Reforms', said there are several constitutional questions involved in the petitions which have a tremendous bearing on sanctity of electoral process.
He said the issue of reference to Constitution Bench can be looked into first.
The top court said that this will also require hearing.
The NGO, which had filed the plea in 2017 on the alleged issue of corruption and subversion of democracy through illicit and foreign funding of political parties and lack of transparency in the accounts of all political parties, had filed an interim application in March before the assembly polls in West Bengal and Assam seeking that window for sale of electoral bonds be not reopened.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)
Featured Video Of The Day
Top Court To Hear Plea Over Fireball Use Against Elephants In West Bengal Trump's Return Could Shift US Legal Stance On Key Supreme Court Cases Petition Seeks Ban On WhatsApp Over Compliance, Supreme Court Says No Heads Severed, Body Parts On Road: Party Ends In Deadly Crash For 6 Friends He Slit Open A Man's Stomach At Noida Meat Shop, Then Chased And Stabbed Him In Haryana, 1,500 Kg Buffalo Eats 20 Eggs A Day. It Is Worth Rs 23 Crore India, China Ministers To Meet, 1st High-Level Talks Post Disengagement Video: With Dance And Dhol, PM Modi Receives A Traditional Welcome In Bihar The Eyewash That Is 'Responsible AI' Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world.