India's Supreme Court on Thursday scrapped a seven year-old election funding system that allows individuals and companies to donate money to political parties anonymously and without any limits.
The decision is seen as a setback for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which has been the largest beneficiary of the system it introduced in 2017.
The system, called 'Electoral Bonds', was challenged by opposition members and a civil society group on grounds that it hindered the public's right to know who had given money to political parties.
Under the system, a person or company can buy these bonds from the state-run State Bank of India and donate them to a political party of their choice.
A five-judge bench headed by Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud said that the system is "unconstitutional".
The court directed SBI to not issue any more of these bonds.

Rubio says Iran deal could take days as US launches fresh strikes
Philippines ends rescue efforts as hope fades for victims of building collapse
Netanyahu says Israel will escalate strikes against Hezbollah
WHO chief says fast-moving Ebola epidemic outpacing response efforts
