Inside the ophthalmology ward at the Shri Maharaja Hari Singh hospital (SMHS)  in Srinagar, four teenage girls between 12 and 19, lie on parallel beds with their eyes shut.
Hit in the eyes with lead-based pellets, they are the latest victims of the "non-lethal" projectiles used by the Indian troops as a method of crowd control in India-administered Kashmir. 
Three of the girls - 13-year-old Ifrah Jan, and two 18-year olds, Shabroza Akhtar and Shabroza Baghat - were hit in the face during protests on Sunday in Rumhoo village, in the  Pulwama district of southern Kashmir. 
Urfi Rashid, 19, was struck on Monday when she peered out of her home in the village of Chitragam Kalan, in the southern district of  Shopian.  
On Thursday, Dr Tariq Qureshi, the head of ophthalmology at SMHS, told News that he had conducted primary surgery on all four. He is optimistic about the girls regaining their vision.
"The condition of all the four girls has improved. They have vision. We are waiting to see the improvement, and then we will see if they need secondary surgery. But they are not blind," he told News.
The families are still in a state of shock.
"Pellets are inside her head as well," Akhter's mother, Rafika told News sitting beside the hospital bed.
"You need to be able to see for every type of job or work. She was very bright. I don't understand what happened to her."
Ifra says she tried to shield her eyes with her hands but ended up hurting both.  “They beat me even after I was hits,” she says.  [Shoaib Masoodi/News]
Similarly, Rashid's mother, Maryam Begum, 42, told News that her only concern was her daughter's eyesight. 
"I am only praying that she should be able to see again," Begum said, from the hospital.
"If she was hit in any other part of body, that wouldn't have been this difficult," she said.
"She was not pelting stones or protesting. She is a girl and has a long life ahead. My husband is a simple farmer, it's a very difficult situation for us in every way."
Police officials said in a statement that they had cordoned off a village in Pulwama District on Sunday morning to conduct a search. They said they discharged pellets after they were attacked by a mob. 
"A huge mob assembled and pelted stones on the security forces camp. The reinforcements was sent to the spot. In this incident some persons as well as security forces including three officers were injured."
Locals allege that after the incident, troops went on the rampage, entering homes and breaking property.
News was not able to reach the police for comment about these allegation