Khaleej Times

Modi govt pushing to develop islands for military, trade and tourism

- Sanjeev Miglani

jirkatang — Bollywood music blares from a line of food stalls serving tourists outside the entrance to a thickly-forested tribal reserve on India’s far-flung Andaman and Nicobar islands.

Beyond the barrier patrolled by police, a few hundreds members of the Jarawa tribe hunt the lush rainforest for turtles and shoot fish with bows and arrows, largely unseen and untouched by the outside world.

As Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government seeks to accelerate developmen­t on the islands to promote its military, trade and tourism, preserving the pristine environmen­t and handful of unique tribes is likely to get harder.

“The islands are fragile, they are in a seismicall­y active zone not far from Indonesia’s Aceh coast,” said Pankaj Sekhsaria of Indian environmen­tal group Kalpavriks­h.

“Above all, they are home to indigenous tribes. This is their land, their history. There are serious concerns about the impact of tourists ... If history is any indication,

Environmen­t expert interactio­n between our world and their world has proved damaging for them.”

Tourism is only part of New Delhi’s vision for the Indian Ocean islands. Lying on a busy shipping route between mainland India and southeast Asia, they are seen as ideal for extending India’s economic and military reach.

With that in mind, Modi’s government is determined to push harder than previous administra­tions to develop the islands, while at the same time protecting tribes and landscapes.

“The support we have got from the central government over the last year has been phenomenal. They want things to happen,” said A.K. Singh, lieutenant governor of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and India’s top official there.

“We want comprehens­ive developmen­t of the islands and its people while protecting the interests of the tribes as well as the environmen­t. Ours is a transparen­t, deliberate policy. There is nothing to hide.”

To integrate or isolate?

The dark-skinned Jarawas, numbering around 400 and one of six tribes believed to have lived on the islands for up to 55,000 years, refused until recently to have any contact with the outside world.

“There are two schools of thought. One is to protect and preserve their cultural identity and avoid inter-mingling with the outside world,” said D.M. Shukla, the islands’ tribal welfare secretary.

“The other is to mainstream them into the outside world so that they enjoy the fruits of the developmen­t.”

The latter argument is gaining momentum, with government officials saying economic developmen­t must not be held back.

Boosting tourism and other Andamanese, Chariar, Chari, Kora, Tabo, Bo, Yere, Kede, Bea,

Balawa, Bojigiyab, Juwai, Kol industries is not easy in a territory where over 90 per cent of land is off-limits forest.

But already the military is lengthenin­g runways at airfields in the north and south of an archipelag­o that generals believe is a key but long-neglected outpost to counter the Chinese navy’s thrust into the Indian Ocean.

The civilian administra­tion, energised by Modi’s push to boost developmen­t, plans direct air links to Southeast Asia, an undersea cable to improve communicat­ions and a free port area.

State carrier Air India will begin flights this year between the Andaman capital Port Blair and Thailand’s Phuket, which gets more tourists than all of India put together, according to island officials.

“If we get even a fraction of that traffic to our beaches, it would transform the islands,” said the islands’ chief secretary Anand Prakash.

A more ambitious plan to build a port in Great Nicobar island near the mouth of the Strait of Malacca, through which some 60,000 ships pass annually, is on hold because it would need vast amounts of land in an ecological­ly sensitive belt, Prakash added.

The islands are fragile, they are in a seismicall­y active zone

Pankaj Sekhsaria

Vivek Rae, former chief secretary of the Andaman and Nicobar islands, said it was unrealisti­c to reserve 1,000 square km of forest for 400-odd Jarawas.

“While it is nobody’s case that the entire land mass should be denuded of forest cover and the tribes relegated to the dustbin of history, there is surely a compelling case for clearing up some of the land for exploiting the economic and strategic potential of these islands,” he wrote in

Some business leaders on the archipelag­o agree.

“Ours is a dole-based economy. Everything is subsidised, from our food to our travel to the mainland. How sustainabl­e is that?” said Mohammed Jadwet, of the Jadwet Trading Company, one of the islands’ oldest enterprise­s.

Proposed measures will put Delhi on a collision course with environmen­talists and human rights groups who have long argued that the archipelag­o of 556 islands, 37 of which are inhabited, should be left undisturbe­d.

The dark green islands dotting an azure sea boast bird, reptile and butterfly species found nowhere else, as well as some of the finest corals in the world, Sekhsaria said.

At Jirkatang, tourists travel in convoy with police cars at the front and back, and no photograph­y or contact with tribes is allowed in order to protect them.

But occasional­ly images are captured and food thrown to tribe members, and Survival Internatio­nal has called for the main road through the Jarawa reserve to be closed to tourists. It calls their activity there “human safaris.” —

 ?? Getty Images ?? ‘Dole-based economy’
Getty Images ‘Dole-based economy’

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