Major Raid Seizes 32,000 Pirated NCERT Books; University Status Looms

The Crime Branch of Delhi Police, with NCERT officials, raided a printing facility in Ghaziabad and seized approximately 32,000 pirated NCERT textbooks along with printing machinery. The action was based on an earlier FIR and was conducted under the Copyright Act and the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita. NCERT warned that such piracy harms students by circulating substandard content and urged the public to purchase books only from authorised sellers. Separately, sources indicate NCERT is likely to be granted deemed-to-be-university status by the end of January following a pending UGC meeting.

Key Points: 32,000 Pirated NCERT Books Seized in Delhi Police Raid

  • 32,000 pirated textbooks seized
  • Raid in Ghaziabad printing facility
  • Copyright Act & Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita invoked
  • NCERT nears deemed university status
  • Public urged to buy from authorised sources
2 min read

NCERT, Delhi Police seize 32,000 pirated books in major crackdown

Delhi Police & NCERT seize 32,000 pirated textbooks in Ghaziabad raid. Crackdown follows Copyright Act violations as NCERT nears deemed university status.

"Such activities not only violate copyright but also adversely affect students - NCERT"

New Delhi, January 16

The National Council of Educational Research and Training, in coordination with the Crime Branch of Delhi Police, assisted in a major crackdown on the illegal printing of pirated NCERT textbooks.

Acting on specific inputs, the Crime Branch of Delhi Police conducted a raid at a printing facility in Village Jawli, Loni, Ghaziabad (U.P.).

During the operation, around 32,000 pirated NCERT textbooks of various classes and subjects were seized. The police also recovered two printing machines, aluminium printing plates, paper rolls, and printing ink, indicating large-scale unauthorised printing.

The action was initiated on the basis of inputs developed during an earlier case registered vide FIR No. 336/2025 dated November 11, 2025, by the Crime Branch of the Delhi Police, under the relevant provisions of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita and the Copyright Act, 1957.

Officials from NCERT's Publication Division were present during the raid and seizure proceedings and provided technical assistance for the identification and verification of pirated material.

NCERT reiterated that unauthorised printing, distribution, or sale of NCERT textbooks is a punishable offence under law. Such activities not only violate copyright but also adversely affect students and the education system by circulating substandard and incorrect content.Members of the public are encouraged to purchase NCERT textbooks only from authorised sources and to report any suspected cases of piracy to NCERT or local authorities.

Meanwhile, the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) is likely to be granted deemed-to-be-university status by the end of January, sources in the Ministry of Education said.

According to sources, the groundwork for granting the status has been completed, and the University Grants Commission (UGC) will hold a meeting to decide.

"The preparation has been done. The UGC has to hold a meeting to make a decision. We are hopeful that once the next meeting takes place, the update will come by the end of the month," a source said.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priyanka N
While this crackdown is necessary, the root cause is affordability. Original NCERT books are not that expensive, but for many families, even that small amount matters. Maybe NCERT should look at more subsidized distribution or digital free access to truly curb piracy.
A
Aman W
32,000 books! That's a huge operation. These illegal printers in Loni, Ghaziabad areas have been a problem for years. Good to see coordinated action. The news about NCERT becoming a deemed university is also interesting. Will it help improve research quality? 🤔
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Sarah B
As someone who works in publishing, this is a significant seizure. The aluminium plates and machines show it was a professional setup. Copyright violation hurts authors and the institution. Hope the new Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita provisions lead to stricter punishments.
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Vikram M
Parents, please be careful where you buy books from. Always check for the official NCERT logo and print quality. Saving 50 rupees isn't worth your child studying from a book with errors. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳
K
Kriti O
The timing with the deemed university status news is notable. Is this crackdown also about strengthening NCERT's institutional credibility before the upgrade? Either way, it's a positive step for our education system.

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

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