Cheap, ‘non-lethal’ guns a deadly scourge in Colombia’s crime-plagued cities
- Imitation firearms imported from China and Turkey can shoot rubber projectiles up to 15 metres
- Some 1.6 million imitation guns have been sold in Colombia in the 12 years since imports were legalised

One can buy them on street corners, legally, for the price of a toy – so-called non-lethal guns that nevertheless maim, and which proliferate in Colombia’s crime-plagued cities.
Imitation guns are sought after by criminals and citizens alike, for attack and self-defence – a symptom, observers say, of creeping lawlessness in a country still traumatised by decades of civil war.
The guns’ “impact on public security is lethal,” Colombian security expert Orlando Carillo said.
According to the FIP peace-building think tank, some 1.6 million imitation guns have been sold in Colombia in the 12 years since imports were legalised.
They look like the real thing and shoot projectiles from a 9mm or 7.65mm cartridge. The only real difference is that the bullets are rubber.
Still, up to a distance of 15 metres (49 feet), a rubber bullet “can cause serious injuries to a bone or muscle. To the soft parts (of the body), like an eye or an artery, an impact can be deadly,” said Carillo.