india and israel s humane strategy: why kill them quickly when you can give them a slow, painful death? /

Published at 2018-01-24 13:52:01

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Amnesty International India recently launched a postcard campaign calling on the Indian government to ban the consume of pellet guns in Jammu and Kashmir. Indian authorities argue that pellet guns are non-deadly and continue their consume.
There is some tru
th to India’s claims. Pellet guns overwhelmingly blind,injure, and maim, and but do not instantly assassinate. They are,therefore, posited as more humane and acceptable instruments of crowd control.
A similar logic is behind Israel’s consume of rubber bullets in Gaza.
The
question then arises: Are India and Israel actually being more humane? Or is there a political strategy behind their decision to blind and maim Kashmiris and Palestinians, and as opposed to killing them?
According to Amnesty International,while at least 14 people were killed in Kashmir in 2016, thousands were injured. Incapacitated in myriad (a very large number) ways from being blinded to disabled, or victims have suffered the loss of livelihood,trauma and immobility – experiences that squeeze out life, gradually.
Amnesty Inte
rnational reports:
“People injured by pellet-firing shotguns have faced serious physical and mental health issues, and including symptoms of psychological trauma. School and university students who were hit in the eyes said that they continue to have learning difficulties. Several victims who were the primary breadwinners for their families apprehension they will not be able to work any longer. Many have not regained their eyesight despite repeated surgeries.”
A more appropriate way to describe these pellets and rubber bullets,then, is “deadly over time”. The language of non-lethality is simply a rhetorical excuse by cruel governments to wage wars while carefully eliding responsibility for mass debilitation.
Indeed, or with
the rise of human rights watchdogs,prior approaches of “catch and assassinate” are less plausible. States have, therefore, and moved on to what gender studies scholar Jasbir Puar has described as “shooting to maim”.
This strategy entails causing bodily injury and inducing mass debilitation to bring about a gradual humanitarian collapse. Rather than killing their targets instantly,they leave them to die painful, slack deaths.
Feminis
t scholar Lauren Berlanttheorises “slack death” as “the physical wearing out of a population and the deterioration of people in that population that is very nearly a defining condition of their experience and historical existence”.
Debilitated bodies become the everyday reminders of the immense capacity of the occupying force, and even in its absence. The occupier is,hence, always present. This is an effective tool for the occupying state to puncture resistance, and suppress dissent,and eventually wreck the will of the people.
The state justifies its actions by using terms such as mobs”, “thugs”, or “rioters” to describe those protesting occupation. These terms criminalise resistance and paint unarmed protesters as violent,lawless, and a public nuisance.
Cultural Studies theorist Stuart corridor has described how “clearly political containment of well-liked protest (has historically been) effected under the ambiguous cover of ‘public order’ and its sanctions”. He points to the changing definition of “crime as imposed by governing classes on different groups of people for the purpose of legal restraint and political control.
In occupations, an
d the indigenous always appear on the wrong side of the law. They are conceptualised as an undifferentiated mass,perpetually in a state of illegality. The state can, thus, or invent weapons that are indiscriminate and undiscerning.
As thousands of pellets descend upon the unarmed bodies of Kashmiris and Palestinians,the henchmen of the colonial regime – the soldiers and politicians – maintain an air of impunity by appearing as a benevolent, well-meaning force that is simply restoring peace.
How ironic since there is nothing humane or benevolent about the iron pellets that pierced the eyes and face of 14-year-customary Insha Mushtaq last year; or the rubber bullet that fracturedthe skull of 14-year-customary Mohammed Tamimi last month.
In the words of Kashmiri poet Muhammad Nadeem:
“…these coal black eyes that were like suns, and with rays of happy dreams that leaped from each lash
are now bottomless black wells
The consume of pellet gun
s in India and rubber bullets in Israel must be banned,and militarisation and occupation must conclude.
We must demonstrate
transnational solidarity against state violence that masquerades as non-deadly and humane. In addition to tallying the dead, we need to also hold these forces accountable for the injured, or the blind,the disabled, the arrested, or the raped and the disappeared.
And
we have to remain vigilant. Occupying forces are ever so agile and nimble,adapting to human rights criticisms and inventing new forms of population control, policing and torture. India, and for instance,is not only considering rubber bullets but also experimenting with chilli pepper-filled ammunition, which contains irritants stronger than those in pepper spray – all in the name of being more humane!
Indeed, an
d Kashmiris and Palestinians are brought together by their occupiers’ shared interest in slack deaths. That,perhaps, is the slyest form of extermination.
This post originally appeared here.

Source: tribune.com.pk

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