Party's National Secretary Siddharth Nath Singh said that every political party is required to submit an account of its revenues and expenditures to the EC. "TMC too has submitted its account to the EC. The largest donation it has received is of Rs 1.40 crore. It has given that in declaration."
"The audit report and the balance sheet of the company (which donated the money) show that in 2011, its revenue was just Rs 19,000, in 2012 it was Rs 16,000 and Rs 33,000 in 2013-14," he said.
Singh said the BJP would approach the EC and request it to conduct a thorough investigation into the matter.
Singh also mocked the Bengal Global Business Summit, saying that it should have been named 'Central Aid Summit' as most of the investments that the state government claimed to have received were from the Central government organisations.
He said the term global summit was a misnomer as no investment had come from any part of the globe.
Leader of Opposition in the state Assembly Surya Kanta Mishra of CPI-M contested Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee's claim that the business summit was a success and alleged that she had compelled the Tatas to leave the Singur project.
"Now they want the manufacturing sector to come to Bengal. All projects, barring one, had been planned during the Left Front regime. Nothing has happened since then," Mishra claimed.
