Khaleej Times

Police steer clear of the forbidden island

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port blair — One month after an isolated tribe killed an American missionary seeking to convert them, Indian police have still not tried to retrieve the body of John Allen Chau from his remote island grave.

But they are still trying to interview two American missionari­es suspected of encouragin­g Chau to go to North Sentinel in the Andaman Islands, in breach of a strict cordon put around its isolated inhabitant­s.

Chau, 26, was cut down in a hail of arrows, according to fishermen who dropped him off nearby, as he marched towards the Sentineles­e tribespeop­le with his “Jesus loves you” message.

Investigat­ors in the Indian Ocean chain of 500 islands will formally ask two American missionari­es who had spoken with Chau before his death to give evidence, police said. “We have initiated the process of serving them a notice to be part of (the) investigat­ion,” local police chief Dependra Pathak said.

The notice, which would have to go between the Indian and US government­s, would only require the Americans to answer questions.

The identities of the Americans, a man and a woman, have not been given. They are known to have left India. Chau was killed in mid-November but news of his death only emerged six days later.

The incident cast a new spotlight on efforts to protect one of the world’s last “uncontacte­d” tribes, whose language and customs remain a mystery to the rest of the world.

Outsiders are banned from travelling

near the island to protect the tribe from outside diseases.

Police have twice sent a vessel close to North Sentinel in a bid to see where Chau may have been killed. They acknowledg­e that it is unlikely that they would risk provoking the tribe by setting foot on the island.

Anthropolo­gists and activists for

isolated tribal communitie­s have called on Indian authoritie­s not to try to retrieve the body.

“We are still awaiting the firm view of the Anthropolo­gical Survey of India and field experts,” Pathak said. “What we have gathered is that going over there is not desirable for their health and psychologi­cal wellbeing.” —

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