All 500 copies of the book were seized and destroyed.
Nearly all copies were seized by the police and destroyed.
When his first book came out, it was banned and copies were seized by authorities.
On 1 April 1971, 139 more copies were seized.
Few copies ever reached the streets: it seems that most copies were seized.
The book was immediately banned by the British and 5000 copies were seized and destroyed.
In all, 500,000 copies were seized in the last four months of Babangida's rule.
In July 2012, Feteh was closed by government order, and 30,000 copies of the paper were seized.
These are seized counterfeit copies of current popular films.
On 23 January all copies of a seventh Letter were seized and suppressed.