SRINAGAR: Indian authorities call the shotgun shells filled with hundreds of small metal pellets a “non-lethal” weapon for crowd control, but that does not make them harmless. They’ve inflicted a permanent toll on thousands of people hit by them in India-held Kashmir.
Their faces are scarred. Their eyes are damaged or simply gone, replaced with prosthetics. And their psychological wounds run deeper still.
“What I miss most is being able to read the Holy Quran,” says Firdous Ahmad Dar, 25, a man who lost vision in both eyes after being shot with the pellets during an anti-India protest in the disputed Himalayan region.
The pellets have been in use here since 2010. Soldiers are trained to fire the shotguns below protesters’ waists, causing immense pain but in theory no permanent injuries. But a police official acknowledged that the rules are “more or less not followed because of the intensity of stone-throwing protests. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity in keeping with department policy.
According to health officials, more than 6,000 people have been injured by shotgun pellets
The latest wave of protests began in early July after Indian troops killed Burhan Wani, a young and charismatic militant commander. As Indian troops cracked down on angry street protests in the held valley, shotguns were their weapon of choice.