Sky marshals, deployed on civilian aircraft
to counter hijack or hostage situations, have been armed with modern
'dum dum' bullets that burst inside the body of an attacker instead of
passing through and hitting any passenger or puncturing the plane's
body.
The bullets, whose peculiar name originated from the first
such ammunition developed by the British near the 'Dum Dum' military
base in Kolkata in pre-independent India, are authorised to be fired
only by special forces commandos the world over to avoid collateral
damage in such an operation.
This type of ammunition is
prohibited for any other use under an international convention. The
country's specialised counter-terror and counter- hijack commando force,
the NSG, has decided to include this ammunition in its armoury
following 2008 Mumbai terror attacks where it had to undertake
close-quarter combat in populated areas like 5-star hotels.
Sources
said these bullets, which are being imported, are made to disintegrate
inside the body of the attacker and result in either killing or severely
immobilising him.
"The bullets have been imported from a
friendly country," the sources said without disclosing the name of the
country citing security reasons.
The National Security Guard
(NSG) deploys a specific number of sky marshals on-board aircraft flying
on select routes and is the federal contingency response force for any
terrorist or hostage like crisis.
The 'black cat' commandos
are now equipped to use these bullets both for counter-hijack and
counter-terror operations and their standard weapons like MP5 assault
rifles and Glock pistols are compatible with it.
Experts said
these bullets prevent collateral damage as unlike normal bullet, they do
not escape out of the attacker's body or punch a hole in an airborne
aircraft which can cause a disaster.
"A sky marshal or a commando
is trained to be a sharp marksman. Despite his hitting the terrorist
accurately, there is a fear that a civilian present next to him may get
hit or the aeroplane suffers damage. "The special bullets give the
commandos an edge and confidence to operate better," Special Forces (SF)
experts said.
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