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It was just another day at Shyam Sunder Kaushal's tea shop in Delhi’s Mangolpuri area when his neighbour rushed to summon him. Kaushal’s daughter Anjali had been hit by a cracker and had collapsed, the neighbour told him.
When Kaushal reached his house – not too far from his tea shop – he found 17-year-old Anjali unconscious.
“Only when we took her to a hospital we realised that she had been hit by a bullet. Two police officers told us that the bullet had been fired at a wedding,” Kaushal tells The Quint.
Shockingly, Anjali wasn’t even at that wedding. She was merely standing on the balcony watching the baraat go by when the bullet hit her.
Two days after she was shot, on 19 April this year, Anjali succumbed to her injuries.
More than 10 cases of deaths from celebratory firing – a loose term for shooting a gun into the air in celebration – have been reported in less than a month.
These stray bullets have often left a long, bloody trail at wedding celebrations in India. Culturally, carrying a gun, especially for the men, is a symbolic display of power and manhood. But, is there a legal deterrent in place?
On Monday, the Sangwan khap in Uttar Pradesh banned celebratory firing. In December, the Haryana government banned carrying of arms at wedding functions. This was preceded by a 2012 Allahabad High Court ruling that ordered the same.
“This is not of any use. Nobody does anything. The police has done nothing. Only one person has been arrested and he was already wanted by the local police,” Kaushal says.
Lack of witnesses is one of the biggest challenges in Anjali’s case and in cases of celebratory firings in general. This, obviously, makes prosecution more difficult.
He says he is helpless now. After making multiple visits to police stations as well as the office of DCP (Outer) Vikramjit Singh and the office of the Delhi Commission for Women, Kaushal decided to take the judicial route.
“I believe the police has cheated us. I was never shown the video footage on the basis of which the police claimed to have identified the man. I had no other option but to file a PIL but I do not know if I will get justice.”
Kaushal’s petition before the Delhi High Court asks for the practice of celebratory firing to be banned. It also demands accountability on the part of owners of the property where the incidents take place as well as reimbursement for the family of victims.
The next hearing on Kaushal’s petition is listed for 16 January.
Before Kaushal’s petition, an NGO filed another PIL before the Delhi High Court asking for stringent norms for arms licenses. The Delhi Police does not even maintain a separate file for cases of celebratory firing.
Senior Superintendent of Police, Bhatinda, Swapan Sharma maintains that it’s unfair to expect the police to monitor every single place, including wedding venues. “It’s for Indians to decide what sort of society they want,” he says.
Kaushal is among many others who have lost a child to senseless displays of masculine power and who are seeking justice for an act triggered by few minutes of frivolity. He, along with others, know that even if their efforts succeed, it will never bring their loved ones back.
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