Fri, 19 Jun 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jun 18, 2026 · 15:36
India News Updated Jun 18, 2026

FSSAI Seizes 6,500 Litres of Adulterated Ghee in Delhi-Haryana Raid

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has dismantled an inter-state network involved in manufacturing and distributing counterfeit ghee. Over 6,500 litres of suspected adulterated ghee were seized during coordinated operations in Delhi and Haryana. Laboratory tests revealed the products contained vegetable oils and animal fat, violating food safety standards. FSSAI has lodged a formal complaint and an FIR has been registered against the miscreants.

FSSAI seizes over 6,500 litres of suspected adulterated ghee in Delhi, Haryana operations

New Delhi, June 18

The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has dismantled an alleged inter-state network involved in the manufacture and distribution of suspected counterfeit ghee, seizing more than 6,500 litres of suspected adulterated products and related raw materials during coordinated operations in Delhi and Haryana.

The action was carried out by Central Food Safety Officers (CFSOs) under the guidance of Devesh Kumar Mahla, IPS, Director, Northern Regional Office (NRO), FSSAI, in coordination with local police authorities.

Speaking about the operation, Mahla said, "We have seized around 6500 liter of adulterated ghee. It was manufactured with vegetable and animal fat as per the lab report. It was a good operation with FSSAI making decoy and organised surveillance and action."

According to FSSAI, the investigation began after officials identified digital and print advertisements promoting premium cow ghee and regular ghee without mandatory FSSAI licence details and prescribed labelling information.

Officials subsequently conducted a decoy operation, posing as consumers to procure samples of the products. The samples were immediately sent to an FSSAI-recognised NABL-accredited laboratory for detailed analysis.

According to the laboratory findings, the samples did not conform to standards prescribed for ghee under the Food Safety and Standards Regulations and were found to contain a mixture of vegetable oils and other non-dairy constituents.

Based on the findings, FSSAI teams traced the alleged manufacturing, storage and distribution network and carried out enforcement operations on June 17 at multiple locations in Delhi and Haryana.

In Delhi, officials raided a facility at Village Dhulsiras in Dwarka linked to Parit Ram and recovered around 1,020 litres of unidentified oil suspected to be used as raw material in the production of counterfeit ghee, along with approximately 1,500 litres of suspected adulterated ghee. The stock was seized and placed under regulatory custody.

In Haryana, officials conducted an operation at M/S Bala Ji Food Products in Sonipat and seized more than 4,000 litres of suspected adulterated ghee that had been packaged for market distribution.

FSSAI said a formal complaint has been lodged with local police authorities, and an FIR has been registered against the miscreants. The seized materials have been secured under regulatory custody, while statutory enforcement samples have been drawn for further analysis.

The food regulator said further investigations are underway to identify additional entities allegedly linked to the network and reiterated its zero-tolerance approach towards food adulteration and misbranding.

Further, consumers are advised to remain vigilant while purchasing food products and to verify FSSAI licence or registration number, proper labelling information, manufacturer details, packaging integrity and unusually low prices that may indicate counterfeit products.

— ANI

Reader Comments

James A

Impressive operation. As someone who appreciates good food safety standards, it's reassuring to see authorities cracking down on counterfeit products. The decoy operation method seems effective. Hope this continues nationwide - food adulteration is a serious health risk.

Sneha F

Honestly, I'm not surprised. My father bought 'pure desi ghee' from a local shop last month and it didn't even solidify properly in winter. Modi government is doing good work on this front. But 6,500 litres is just the tip of the iceberg - we need mass surveillance like this regularly. 👏

Rohit P

Good that FSSAI acted, but why do we always find out about these things after months of operation? And what about the smaller cities and towns where most milk adulteration happens? Hope the investigation leads to the bigger manufacturers, not just small distributors. Still, better late than never. 😤

Divya L

My grandmother always says - 'if it's too cheap, it's not real'. People need to stop falling for these flashy ads promising premium ghee at half price. Thank you FSSAI for this action. But I also think we need stricter punishment for adulteration - these people are playing with our health and religious sentiments.

Michael C

While this is a good step, I'd like to see more transparency from FSSAI on how they identified these specific vendors. Was it based on complaints? Routine checks? Also, will the tested samples be made public so consumers know which brands to avoid? Just catching them is not enough - we need prevention.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

Leave a comment

Be kind. Add to the conversation. 0/50
Thank you — your comment has been submitted.
JS blocked