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Tamanna, a nine-year-old was sitting at her kitchen window when a pellet hit her eye. Kashmiri youths were protesting against the armed forces in her village Tulmula when Central Reserved Police Forces started firing at them.
“They deliberately fired at our houses,” says Shameema, her mother, while trying to feed her youngest daughter in Shri Maharaja Hari Singh Hospital (SMHS).
This tertiary care hospital is flooded with injured people. People with bullet and pellet injuries started rushing in following the protests that broke in Kashmir after the popular Hizb Ul Mujahidin commander was killed in an ambush on 8 July, 2016. A total of 104 injured were admitted on 10 July, 87 were admitted the next day, and one was brought in on Monday.
SMHS is the only tertiary care hospital in Kashmir. Patients with this kind of injuries are referred to this hospital from most part of the Valley.
“Out of the total 192 injured admitted in SMHS, 99 percent have suffered multiple injuries. We have operated on 80 patients with eye injuries and 80 percent of them are going to be visually impaired for life,” said Dr Sajjad Khandey, ophthalmologist, SMHS.
Eighty percent of the injured are below 25 years of age. They are school going minors, college students, and young professionals. “Yes we are angry, we pelt stones. But you tell us, where else are stones answered with bullets and pellets? India claims to be the largest democracy, how can they be so brutal to us?” asks a young engineer sitting at the edge of a bed in the injury ward.
“India is acting exactly like Israel does. Our boys are being brutalised. These boys have lost their vision, their life is changed forever,” he continues angrily.
“Most of them are young boys in their 20s. If they suffer an eye injury, the entire family has to suffer. They spend their resources on the treatment but we know the limitations of medical science, even after spending every single penny they have got, they don’t get their normal vision back. They become burden for their families and the society,” says Dr Khandey.
“Only the number of deaths makes news, nobody talks about the injured But, we know the magnitude of their sufferings,” continued Dr Sajjad Khandeey.
And it is not just the injuries that make these young boys suffer; they pay a dearer cost:
“Indian media doesn’t come here to talk about this serious human rights violation, instead, they only talk about the torched BJP district office and malign the image of our heroes,” says Naved Dar, a 21-year-old accompanying his 14-year-old cousin in the hospital. His cousin has suffered multiple pellet injury.
An enraged crowd gathered inside the hospital compound on Saturday when the injured were flowing in from all around Kashmir. There is a police station close to the hospital and the angry mob outside was pelting stones at the police. The police started shelling tear gas not only at the mob outside the hospital but also at the injured patients inside the hospital.
“They are targeting our hospitals, attacking our ambulances, shooting at our youth to kill or to cripple. It’s heinous,” says an angry doctor.
The wards in SMHS are full of bullet and pellet gun injuries. Some local NGOs have arranged food and medicine for the patients and their attendants who have been staying in the hospital for last three days.
The State has declared a medical emergency. The total number of casualties has reached 32, including one policeman. And nobody in the Valley seems to believe the situation is going to improve in coming days.
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