End in sight for India's notorious human safaris
End in sight for India's notorious human
safaris
September 18, 2017
Notorious “human safaris” in India’s Andaman Islands may soon stop, after the authorities announced that a new sea route around the islands will soon open.
The new route will keep tourists off the infamous Andaman Trunk Road, which was built illegally through the forests of the isolated Jarawa tribe.
Survival’s Director Stephen Corry said: “Treating the Jarawa as a tourist spectacle was a disgusting practice – it also put their lives in danger. It’s more than time for the human safaris to end. If this sea route can do that, then we welcome it. If not, we’ll carry on campaigning until the Jarawa’s right to determine their own futures and stop being harassed by tourists is secure.”
The road brings a daily invasion of hundreds of tourists into the heart of the Jarawa reserve, who treat the Jarawa like animals in a safari park.
One tourist described his trip: “The journey through tribal reserve was like a safari ride as we were going amidst dense tropical rainforest and looking for wild animals, Jarawa tribals to be specific”.
The Jarawa, like all recently contacted peoples, face catastrophe unless their land is protected.
The human safaris are also dangerous – one Jarawa boy lost his arm after tourists threw food at him from a moving vehicle.
In 2002 India’s Supreme Court ordered the road closed, but it has remained open.
Survival International led a global campaign against the human safaris, calling for a boycott of the Andaman tourist industry until they came to an end. Nearly 17,000 people from around the world pledged not to holiday in the islands in protest.
The boycott will be called off as soon as the Andaman government agrees to ensure that tourists are no longer able to use the road.
Background
briefing
- In 2012, shocking
footage emerged of Jarawa girls being made to dance at the
side of the road, during a human safari. This led to a
global outcry against the dehumanizing use of tribal people
as tourist exhibits.
- The Jarawa are one of the tribes
indigenous to the Andaman islands. They live as hunter
gatherers, and chose to reject contact with mainstream
Indian society until 1998. Several other Andamanese tribes
were wiped out following British colonization of the islands
in the 19th century.
- In 1999 and 2006, the Jarawa
suffered outbreaks of measles – a disease which has
devastated many recently contacted tribes. and which is
often a consequence of forced contact.
-Tourism is a
major industry in the Andaman islands. The new sea route
will be used to access the north of the islands and
attractions like the limestone caves and mud volcano at
Baratang without tourists intruding into the land of the
Jarawa.
- The Islands’ Lieutenant-Governor, Professor
Mukhi, announced recently that the sea route will be quicker
and more comfortable than the current journey by
road.