What pellet guns have done to protesters in Kashmir
Another day dawns in Indian-administered Kashmir and people are rushed from different corners of the valley to the Shri Maharaja Hari Singh Hospital (SMHS) in Srinagar. The ophthalmology ward is packed and most of the injured carry pellet wounds, especially on the face and torso. The sight of the human damage caused by the indiscriminate use of pellet guns is a reminder of the Indian security forces’ impunity toward Kashmiri civilians.
The Indian police claims that pellet gun is a non-lethal weapon but according to the Kashmir Blind Spot Campaign (KBSC), the use of the gun — normally reserved for hunting animals — has resulted in more than 69 deaths.
If not always fatal, it leaves a lifelong impact on the victims.
According to the Indian government, 500 people have been injured by this weapon, most of whom have “multiple structural damage” to their eyes, requiring multiple surgeries and lengthy medical treatment.
The KBSC, however, reports a much higher number with more than 4,500 injured due to pellet wounds.
In the first 32 days of the conflict only, the Indian army had used 1.3 million pellets.
Amnesty International has called for pellet guns to be banned as it can cause blindness.