Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

For 20 years I wondered what had happened to the little girl in the photo..was she still alive?

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alive and healthy was brilliant and she had retained that natural beauty.” But the camp he found them in, under blue tarpaulins, was on the edge of a palm oil plantation.

“They’re living in hell,” he says, “among the very thing that is destroying them.

“I think it’s absolutely heartbreak­ing. It’s devastatin­g, there’s no other word for it. In my heart of hearts, I knew when I went out there I was asking for trouble.”

But, along the way, as he searches for the girl within another tribe, he meets a family who are still managing to eke out an existence as hunter gatherers.

Chris was particular­ly inspired by a young boy, Njarang.

“He is living the life – pretty much – that she did. We walked through the jungle for two hours and he cavorted along barefoot, finding food, eating it, climbing trees, jumping on spiky vines.

“There are few children in the world who have the knowledge, ability and freedom to live in their environmen­t. So there is a vestige of hope left. I was scrabbling around to find that after the horror of finding her living in that squalid camp in an oil plantation.”

When he meets with Sumping, who is now married with three children, he finds that she is quite shy, possibly because women are only allowed to meet men in the company of their husband.

“Had I have been a woman, I could have met her without her husband being there and the whole thing might have been a bit more free-flowing,” he says.

That said, she was more forthcomin­g when the cameras were switched off.

“When we weren’t filming and she was off with her friends she was ecstatic about the gifts that we’d given her and she was loving being the centre of attention. The enforced shyness came from the fact she wouldn’t normally have that contact with any man, let alone some strange English bloke who’d come all the way from the other side of the world to find her.”

Chris believes that the murders that devastated the tribe were caused by the deforestat­ion, which had forced them to move closer and closer to civilisati­on.

“Palm oil is what is affecting these people and it’s about our consumptio­n, what you or I buy in a supermarke­t. So we have a profound impact,” he says. He believes, rather than simply trying to avoid palm oil products, more drastic measures are needed to ensure the future of these precious parts of the planet. “There are too many of us. We need to cut our consumptio­n and ultimately there needs to be less people,” he says.

Chris, who has a 22-year-old stepdaught­er, would like to see world leaders talking seriously about compelling people to have smaller families.

“We have the means to start regulating our population if only we’d start talking about it and thinking about it.

“It’s imperative we do, sooner rather than later. We’re bringing children into a world where we don’t know what that future is and that’s pretty irresponsi­ble.”

For the moment, he is committed to helping the Orang Rimba.

“As a people, they are destined for destructio­n,” he says. “We’ve got to restore habitats, reduce consumptio­n and make our exploitati­on sustainabl­e.”

He’s pretty optimistic that positive change is around the corner.

“We’re the most intelligen­t, adaptable species the planet has produced. If we don’t stop this nonsense we’ve had it.”

Chris Packham: In Search of the Lost Girl, Sunday, 9pm, BBC2.

 ??  ?? Chris’s original pic of tribe girl
Chris’s original pic of tribe girl
 ??  ?? Chris is given a spear by an elder
Chris is given a spear by an elder

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