Recovery of body could take days
PORT BLAIR, India — Authorities said on Thursday that it may take “some days” to recover the body of a US citizen killed in a hail of arrows shot by a tribe untouched by modern civilization.
John Allen Chau, 27, was attacked as he set foot last week on the remote North Sentinel Island, one of the Indian Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal that is off limits to visitors, police said.
Dependra Pathak, the head of the region’s police, said that authorities sent a helicopter to the area and then a ship to identify where the incident took place.
“We maintained a distance from the island and have not yet been able to spot the body. It may take some more days and ... (reconnaissance) of the area,” Pathak said.
North Sentinel is home to the Sentinelese people, believed to number only around 150. To protect their way of life, foreigners and Indians are banned from going within 5 kilometers of the island.
Police have roped in field experts including Indian anthropologists, and tribal welfare and forest officers to help them tackle the situation.
“We have to take care that we must not disturb them or their habitat by any means. It is a highly sensitive zone and it will take some time,” Pathak said.
Indian police said a murder case had been registered against “unknown” tribespeople and that six fishermen and one other person who allegedly helped Chau get to the island were arrested.
Authorities said one of the objectives of the arrests was “demonstrative effect, so that (the) entire world and locals know that no one can go there”.
Chau was apparently shot and killed by arrows, but the cause of death can’t be confirmed until his body is recovered, Pathak said.
In an online post, his family said it was mourning him as a “beloved son, brother, uncle and best friend to us”. The family also said it forgave his killers and called for the release of those who assisted him in his quest to reach the island.
stands for a photograph with a friend in October in Cape Town, South Africa.