India gun control enabled Mumbai slaughter

i cant view the attachments because im not a member of that forum.
im sure though, that there are many photos of the police using older rifles.
what i dont necessarily understand is the mindset of "useless" gear that some people seem to think these rifles fall into.
if the police are trained in those weapons, then they will be able to fight other people using small arms. just because the terrorists have AK-47s or automatic rifles does not make them invincible to another slower rifle.
the police seemed to be scared away by the brute force of the attacks. they could of been armed with the best of the best, they were just not prepared for that type of combat. their gear and equipment had little to do with the response. their training did.

Big assumption in there. That being they had any training...
I read this today.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/Mumbai_cops_hadnt_fired_in_10_yrs/articleshow/3783461.cms

Cops just had 577 rifles, hadn't fired in 10 yrs
2 Dec 2008, 1203 hrs IST, Prafulla Marpakwar, TNN

MUMBAI: The state constabulary was grossly unprepared to deal with the worst-ever terror attacks on the metropolis because of an acute shortage of weapons and ammunition.

Official records show that for a force of well over 1.8 lakh, the home department procured a meagre 2,221 weapons — 577 for Mumbai, and 1,644 for the rest of Maharashtra.

‘‘Under the centrally sponsored modernisation programme, we purchased almost all types of weapons, but for a state like Maharashtra, the number of weapons was grossly inadequate ,’’ a senior official told TOI on Monday.

In the absence of a firing range and of ammunition for practice, members of the law enforcement agencies have not opened fire in the last ten years. ‘‘I’ve been in the police force for a long time, but I had no occasion to open fire for practice,’’ a senior inspector of police said.

As per the police manual, officials ranking from constable to assistant inspector get rifles with 30 rounds each, and those with the rank of police sub-inspector and above get revolvers, also with 30 rounds each.

Jawans with the State Reserve Police Force are given SLRs or self-loading rifles. In addition, AK-47 rifles have been given to officials posted in areas where there is Naxal activity, while officials on VIP security duty are armed with either revolvers or carbines.

The manual also prescribes mandatory training for all officials, especially shooting practice at the firing range. According to a senior IPS official, the norms prescribed in the manual now exist only on paper because of the acute shortage of ammunition for practice and the non-availability of a firing range.

As per the rules, every district should have a firing range exclusively for the police. But official records indicate that more than half the state’s districts have no independent firing range.

‘‘We have constables who have not opened fire even for practice ever since their recruitment,’’ the official said.
 
I'm not saying that they weren't cowards (as it seems to be the case). I'm just saying that SMLEs aren't exactly suited for CQB work.
 
Official records show that for a force of well over 1.8 lakh

WTF is a lakh?

I presume we speak of a "police force", but is a lakh a big unit?

If is a force as in Newton's F = ma, then it would be in units of pounds (British) or newtons (MKS) or dynes (CGS).

But again, wtf is a lakh?
 
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