Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Spotlight on reclusive tribe with no contact to the outside world

- Tanmay Chatterjee Tanmay.Chatterjee@hindustant­imes.com

KOLKATA: American national John Allen Chau’s killing on the Andaman and Nicobar Islands’ North Sentinel Island on November 16 has brought the reclusive Sentineles­e tribe into focus. The Sentineles­e inhabit the island, which is located 102 km west of the Port Blair, the capital of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. They are hunters and gatherers, who live on the out of bounds North Sentinel Island isolated from the outside world. The Sentineles­e are to believed to be the world’s last preNeolith­ic tribe.

Chau, 26, was killed after some fishermen illegally ferried him to the island on November 16. The fishermen spotted his body, which is yet to be recovered, a day later. The Andaman and Nicobar Islands director general of police Dipendra Pathak said the Sentineles­e are protected by the law and nobody, except tribal welfare officers, are allowed to step onto their island. “This tribe shuns people from the outside world and they attack encroacher­s. It is well known and yet seven fisherreco­rds

THE ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS DGP SAID THE SENTINELES­E ARE PROTECTED BY THE LAW AND NOBODY, EXCEPT TRIBAL WELFARE OFFICERS ARE ALLOWED TO STEP ON THE ISLAND

men took Chau to the island. They watched him,” said Pathak.

No census department official has ever set foot on the North Sentinel Island. But it is estimated that around 60 men, women, and children of the endangered tribe live there. The estimated Sentineles­e population was 117 between 1901 and 1921, according to the census department. In 1931, the number was estimated to be around 50. In February 2001, two groups of census officials conducted a visual survey from boats. One group could count 31 Sentineles­e men, women and children while the other 39.

British soldiers had tried to conduct the first survey of the island in 1880, according to available with the Andaman and Nicobar police. It is also believed to be the first entry of outsiders into North Sentinel. In 1967, anthropolo­gist Triloknath Pundit tried to contact the Islanders. Pandit landed with police officers but the expedition failed.

Indian Institute of Technology (Delhi)’s DST Centre for Policy Research senior project scientist Pankaj Sekhsaria said the North Sentinel Island is the only home of the Sentineles­e. “The island is a tribal reserve under the provisions of the Andaman and Nicobar Protection of Aboriginal Tribes Regulation, 1956. The population size is not known for sure because they cannot be accessed.”

Sekhsaria said the Sentineles­e killed local fishermen, whose boat had drifted onto the island, a few years back. Their bodies could not be recovered. A volley of arrows from the Sentineles­e had forced a helicopter to return without retrieving the bodies. “There has been no contact with them to the best of what I know. Nobody has studied the Sentineles­e. They have remained isolated and hostile,” said Sekhsaria.

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