India has officially banned the sale of Chinese CCTV brands Hikvision, Dahua, and TP-Link from April 1, 2026. The move is driven by new cybersecurity rules requiring Standardization Testing and Quality Certification (STQC) approval, which these companies have failed to obtain. Existing cameras will continue to work, but new sales are blocked.
As India is strongly trying to go vocal for local and trying to invent its own models of electronics and other devices to drive the economy to buy bits of its own country and the export of these goods from other countries, India moves to decline Chinese CCTV sales, which aims to strengthen domestic manufacturing and reduce reliance on Chinese imports in sensitive sectors like surveillance. This move will take place from April 1st to April 30th and will stop the distribution of these catches in the market. People who are using it will have issues with it, but future sales will be stopped.
And it will also make domestic manufacturers and global players (like Bosch, Allus, and Ywell) gain market Using these products has the lack of security breach as foreign entities access footage, and this will determine long-term gain for Make in India surveillance solutions and stronger cybersecurity standards.
This ban is not just about trade—it’s a cybersecurity safeguard and a strategic move to promote domestic tech.
SOURCE: INDIA TODAY
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