Isolated
tribe faces destruction
Survival
| Tuesday, November 11,, 2003
The Jarawa tribe of the Andaman Islands was given new hope
in 2002. In a courageous and unprecedented ruling, the Supreme
Court of India ordered that the 'Andaman trunk road' cutting
through their reserve be closed, and all settlers living on
their land be removed. One year later, the administration
of the islands has made significant progress in removing encroaching
colonists from the Jarawa land. The road, however, remains
open, leaving the Jarawa at risk of disease and exploitation.
The Jarawa are nomadic hunter-gatherers, who have resisted
contact with settlers on the Andaman Islands for nearly 150
years. They are one of four surviving tribes living in the
islands. Two of these, the 'Great Andamanese' and the Onge,
were forcibly settled by the colonial British and Indian authorities,
and were so weakened by contact with new diseases and the
change in their way of life that they were nearly wiped out.
The Jarawa, who number 250-300, live in the rainforest. They
hunt pigs and monitor lizards, and catch fish, turtles and
dugong (a marine animal) with bows and arrows. They also collect
berries, roots and honey from the forest. The Jarawa remained
hostile to outsiders until very recently, when small groups
of them started to appear by the road. It is thought that
this change may be a result of pressure from poachers along
the coast of the reserve. The other Andaman tribe, the Sentinelese,
is protected by living on its own island, and maintaining
its isolation to an even greater degree than the Jarawa. Yet
they too are put at risk by visits to their island by poachers
and government employees.
Since 1948, thousands of Indians have settled in the islands
and they, along with poachers coming by sea, have encroached
on the Jarawa reserve, depriving the tribe of vital forest
resources and bringing diseases to which it has no immunity.
The dangers posed to the Jarawa by unwanted contact with outsiders
increased when the 'Andaman trunk road' was built illegally
though their land in the 1970s. The road brings the Jarawa
into daily contact with travellers on buses and lorries, and
has opened the way for new settlement inside the reserve.
The danger of disease is very real: an unknown number of Jarawa
died in the forest during a measles epidemic in 1999.
The work of Survival and local organisations has been very
effective. Firstly, the high court issued a temporary order
putting plans on hold to settle the Jarawa forcibly. Survival
had warned that forcible settlement would wipe the Jarawa
out, and testimonies gathered by Survival on the effects of
similar policies on nomadic tribal peoples were quoted at
length in the order. Survival had also argued for the closure
of the road and the removal of settlers from the Jarawa's
land, both of which were then ordered by India's supreme court.
The Supreme Court's deadline for the closure of the road was
August 2002, but the road remains open.
Comments made by the Lieutenant Governor of the islands suggest
the administration is reluctant to implement the order. There
has also been major construction work during 2003 on a part
of the road due to be closed, and the local Member of Parliament
has proposed that the road be widened rather than closed.
If delays in implementing the order continue, the administration
of the Andaman Islands could be charged with contempt of court.
More importantly, it risks repeating the past mistakes of
the British and Indian governments by destroying one of the
last remaining tribes of the Andaman Islands.
(Survival has been working on this issue for 10 years.
In June 2000, it handed a petition to the Indian government
with 5,000 signatures in support of the Jarawa's rights to
their land and their way of life. Since 1999 it has published
five action bulletins on the Jarawas, and its supporters around
the world have written thousands of letters to government
officials voicing their concern.)
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