Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Russia’s new anti-riot weapon is a shuttlecock machine-gun

Troublemakers acting aggressively at public gatherings in Russia will soon have to face a mammoth badminton-based weapon. Russian law enforcement is ready to test a shuttlecock machine-gun that will easily knock down any professional tennis player.,Like their colleagues abroad, Russian riot police units are well equipped with water cannon, tear gas grenades and electric stunning devices. But international experience shows that so-called “non-lethal weapons” can be deadly after all.,Tear gas can make some choke to death, while stun guns can easily cause heart arrest. Water cannon cannot be used in Russia in winter as wet protesters might suffer from hypothermia.



So, Russian police are reluctant to use “non-lethal” ammunition. In 2009, the country’s Ministry of Interior conducted an open competitive tender for a pneumatic non-lethal crowd control system. The winning company produced a gun that uses 300-atmosphere pressurized air to throw plastic birdies that can stop even a physically vigorous rioter right on the spot. Gone are the times when police had to hide behind riot shields as enraged street fighters showered them with rocks and pieces of tarmac. Because a pneumatic shuttlecock machine-gun easily tames anybody’s ardor.

The pneumatic machine gun uses a 22-millimeter-diameter, 4.8-gram shuttlecock as its primary weapon. It weighs the same as a bullet but doesn’t fly as fast, and has a much wider hitting surface. The projectile can be loaded with paint to mark malicious troublemakers or simply make it extra heavy, by up to 30 grams more, for additional stopping power. A standard shot with a basic plastic birdie could be compared to a “flick of father’s belt”, the gun’s creators say, while an extra heavy hit strikes like a horse’s kick.


YouTube link.

The “Birdiethrower” can make one sniper shot per second at 50-metre accuracy range. The computer system that operates the gun calculates its power in accordance with the distance to the target: if the person gets closer – the computer downgrades the gun’s power so as not to cripple him or her. Operating the gun may seem like a videogame, but the operator will bear responsibility for every shot he makes: the system makes a video record of everything it does. The pneumatic machine-gun is assembled on a standard Tiger armoured vehicle and is operated by one man plus the driver of the vehicle.

4 comments:

Ratz said...

They used to put dye in the water cannons in Belfast, it made it quite easy to pick up rioters later on.

Why are you blue?
Umm.. I'm a smurf, honest guv.

I don't know why it's not used anymore.

Anonymous said...

Russian TV is fun to watch even if you don't speak Russian. WTF is up with the dude in dress uniform mowing down saplings with a machinegun? It's like watching Flying Circus; I expect Graham Chapman to jump out from behind a bush any second.

gammagoblin said...

The footage of the guy with the machine gun is from a Russian comedy film http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0266437/

Gareth said...

So they've reinvented the rubber bullet yet again.

And how long before this kills somebody? No, I'm not saying it's a bad idea I'm saying it's impossible to make a 100% non lethal weapon. If it can knock you down it can kill you.

I knew a bloke who was pushed in a scuffle, he fell and struck his head on the ground. He was dead before they got him to hospital. This sort of thing will is bound to happen with this sort of weapon and when it does you'll get campaigners calling for them to be banned.

People need to learn that there is no such thing as a none lethal weapon.