Blinded by pellets, Kashmiri children images stun world
WASHINGTON: “Watching cartoons on TV, playing with my friends on the street, reading books for hours — this is what I dream of now,” says nine-year-old Asif Ahmad Sheikh, a Class 5 student from Anantnag.
“I used to teach sewing and tailoring to girls in my village, but not anymore. Because of the injuries, I could not write my class 10 board exam,” says 17-year-old Ulfat Hameed, a Class 10 student from Baramulla.
“When I went to a hospital in Srinagar, there were so many people that the doctors sent me back home as they did not have beds available,” says Bilal Ahmad Bhat, 17, another student from Baramulla.
Read: Will the pellet gun victims in Kashmir ever regain their eyesight?
These three children are among the hundreds of Kashmiri people blinded by pellets in India-held Kashmir. Dozens have lost lives. Their pictures are included in a 109-page book put together by Amnesty International to draw the attention of the international community to the cruel practice.
The book was among the several exhibits displayed at the Pakistan embassy in Washington on Monday evening in connection with the Black Day, which is observed annually to show solidarity with the Kashmiris who are struggling for their rights under Indian occupation.
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The pictures of the pellet-gun victims stunned the world and the universal condemnation that followed forced India to claim that it had ordered its troops not to use those guns anymore. But the Kashmiris say Indian security forces are still using the pellet-guns particularly after Aug 5 when India illegally annexed the disputed territory.
American citizens of Kashmiri origin claim that dozens of Kashmiris in India-held Valley have been injured by pellet-guns in recent months.