Land of the lost tribe:
The Indian Ocean island that is home to a community who have lived
there for 60,000 years... but is too dangerous to visit because they
try to kill outsiders
The indigenous tribe
has lived on North Sentinel Island in the Indian Ocean for an
estimated 60,000 years. Their limited
contact with the outside world usually involves violence, as they
are hostile towards outsiders. Islanders have
been known to fire arrows or toss stones at low-flying aircraft on
reconnaissance missions. Tribespeople have rarely been photographed or recorded on video, as
it is too dangerous to visit the island. India's government has given up on making contact with the islanders
and established a three-mile exclusion zone.
[Above ]Sentinelese
tribespeople, holding javelins, gather on the shore of North Sentinel
Island, located in the Bay of Bengal
From the sky it
appears to be an idyllic island with amazing beaches and a dense
forest, but tourists or fishermen don’t dare to set foot on this
outcrop in the Indian Ocean due to its inhabitants’ fearsome
reputation.
Visitors who venture
onto or too close to North Sentinel Island risk being attacked by
members of a mysterious tribe who have rejected modern civilisation
and prefer to have zero contact with the outside world.
[Left] Following the 2004
tsunami this member of the Sentinelese tribe was photographed firing
an arrow at an Indian Coast Guard helicopter.
When they do interact
with outsiders, it usually involves violence – the indigenous
Sentinelese tribe killed two men who were fishing illegally in 2006
and have been known to fire arrows and fling rocks at low-flying
planes or helicopters on reconnaissance missions.
Located in the Bay of
Bengal, North Sentinel Island belongs to India and remains an enigma,
despite being populated for an estimated 60,000 years.
Untouched by modern
civilisation, very little is known about the Sentinelese people,
their language, their rituals and the island they call home.
[Left] This satellite image
taken by NASA shows the untouched North Sentinel Island, which is
about the size of Manhattan.
It is too dangerous to
approach them due to their hostility to outsiders, meaning they are
rarely photographed up close and almost never seen on video. Most of
the photos and video clips that do exist are of poor quality.
There are also
conflicting reports on the tribe’s population, with most estimates
putting it in the range of a few dozen to a few hundred.
It’s still unclear
what impact the 2004 tsunami had on the population and the island,
which is part of India’s chain of Andaman Islands, although the
uncontacted tribe managed to avoid being wiped out. After the tsunami
one member was photographed attempting to fire an arrow at an Indian
Coast Guard helicopter.
Often referred to as a
‘Stone Age tribe’ – a title that advocates take offence
to, as its members have adapted over time – the Sentinelese
may be the most isolated tribe in the world, with the Indian
government choosing not to meddle in their affairs.
[Left] The tribespeople are
rarely photographed or recorded on video; the only existing images or
video clips tend to be of poor quality.
The government made
several failed attempts to establish contact, but has abandoned all
attempts and allows the tribe to live how it chooses on an island
that is about the size of Manhattan.
Indian authorities have
gone as far as making it a crime to try to make contact with the
Sentinelese. It is illegal to go within three miles of the island.
While privileged people
are eating £15 burgers and splashing £100 on new trainers, the
near-naked Sentinelese are surviving off the land and hunting for sea
creatures.
[Left] To protect the
Sentinelese people - and visitors - the Indian government has
established a three-mile exclusion zone.
But the waters
surrounding the island appear to be under threat by even more illegal
fishermen.
Survival International
reported late last year that it had received reports that fishermen
are targeting the area, with seven men being apprehended by the
Indian Coast Guard.
One of the fishermen
reportedly stepped foot on the island in close proximity to the
tribe’s members, and he managed to leave unscathed.
[Left] Survival International
said the islanders are ‘extremely healthy, alert and thriving’,
but their fishing waters are being threatened.
Survival International,
which advocates for tribal peoples’ rights, describes the
Sentinelese as ‘the most vulnerable society on the planet’ as
they are likely to have no immunity to common diseases such as flu
and measles.
Due to their complete
isolation, the chances of them being wiped out by an epidemic are
very high, according to the organisation.
In a statement, Survival International’s director, Stephen Corry, said: ‘The Great Andamanese tribes of India’s Andaman Islands were decimated by disease when the British colonised the islands in the 1800s.
‘The most recent to
be pushed into extinction was the Bo tribe, whose last member died
only four years ago. The only way the Andamanese authorities can
prevent the annihilation of another tribe is to ensure North Sentinel
Island is protected from outsiders.’
[Left] This aerial image shows
the dense tree canopy on the island, which has remained untouched by
modern civilisation for centuries.
The organisation said
the islanders are ‘extremely healthy, alert and thriving’,
despite threats from the outside world and their 'old world' way of
life.
Their hostility towards
outsiders can at least be partially attributed to past conflicts.
Survival International said 'the outside world has brought them
little but violence and contempt'.
[Left] This aerial image from
Google Maps shows a shipwreck off the coast; clashes with salvagers
have left several tribespeople dead.
In the late 1980s and
early 1990s several tribespeople were killed in battles with armed
salvagers who visited the island to recover iron and other goods from
a shipwreck.
(Source)