Faced with allegations of receiving funds from "dubious" companies, the AAP on Monday night demanded a Supreme Court-monitored Special Investigation Team (SIT) to probe funding of all three major parties in Delhi polls. Asserting that it adopted "total transparency" in its funding, AAP's Yogendra Yadav in a late evening press conference accused BJP of attempting to influence the voters ahead of the 7 February polls by bringing out false allegations. He was responding to allegations by AAP Volunteer Action Manch (AVAM), a breakaway group of the Aam Aadmi Party, which accused the Kejriwal-led party of receiving Rs 2 crores last year through four "dubious" companies. "AAP demands constitution of an SIT to probe funding of all three main political parties Congress, BJP and its own. The SIT should be monitored by the Supreme Court as we already know how the government can manipulate a probe," he said while daring the parties to disclose their fundings publicly. Yadav said "strangely instead of inquiring against AAP, the BJP ministers are today making allegations even after sitting on the files for eight months." He said the party had anticipated such activities by BJP and Kejriwal had warned about it a few days ago. "Ahead of last assembly polls also, the BJP had brought out a CD which turned out to be false later. They do not allow politics of honesty," Yadav said. "BJP today knows it does not have the courage to stand before the public. That is why they are adopting such measures," he said, adding that if AAP had anything to hide it would not have put the funding details on its website. On the midnight timing of realisation of the cheques into AAP's account, he said it was done as per an automated software which updates credit of all the cheques submitted at a particular time of each day.