Why would a UK national
newspaper join forces with a Western campaign group to try to close a road
thousands of miles away on a small Indian archipelago, the Andaman Islands – a
road which allows over 100,000 people to access vital medical services?
For the 105,000 residents of the North and
Middle Andaman districts, spread over 400 villages from Diglipur to Baratang,
the Great Andaman Trunk Road provides indispensable access to the islands’
capital, Port Blair. The road, which opened in the 1980s, is a vital trade and communications
route for locals, and crucially allows them to make road journeys to the only
government hospital on the island. Without the road, many such journeys would
have to be made by sea instead.
But the wishes of tens of thousands of
local inhabitants pale in comparison to those of London-based campaign group
Survival International (SI) and the Observer newspaper. As the self-appointed
guardians of the ancient Jarawa tribe, thought now to number between 250 and
400 people, SI and the Observer complain that the road passes through
the Jarawa tribal reserve.
The Jarawa reserve is over 1,000 square
kilometres - over 12 per cent of the land area of the Andaman and Nicobar
Islands, despite Jarawa making up a mere 0.1 per cent of the island’s population.
Since the opening of the road, many Jarawa have chosen to cluster around it,
receiving gifts and food from the locals. This has led to some unsavoury
incidents, one of which was recorded on video when an off-duty local policeman
was filmed goading Jarawa tribeswomen to dance for food to please visiting
tourists (reported in the Observer last year).
In January this year, the Indian Supreme
Court responded to what the Observer dubbed ‘domestic and international
pressure’ and partially closed the Andaman Trunk Road, preventing any tourists
from accessing the area. Traffic levels reportedly fell by two thirds; even
before that, only eight convoys of cars were permitted to pass through each
day. The Observer, which
had written a series of campaigning articles supporting the closure of the
road, gushed: ‘For the first time in a generation, members of the tribe are
able to wander through their jungle safe from the prying eyes of the tens of
thousands of tourists who travel to the islands in the Bay of Bengal every year
to view them.’ SI, meanwhile, hailed the decision to partially close the road
as a ‘victory’.
Now, however, following a resumed hearing,
during which an application was filed on behalf of local inhabitants stating
that the road was a ‘vital link’, the Supreme Court has ordered that the road
should reopen to traffic, allowing tightly monitored tourist trips down the
Andaman Trunk Road to the nearby limestone caves and mud volcano. As the MP for
the islands has argued previously, ‘With all sympathies for the Jarawa, one
finds it not very logical to halt development of facilities and amenities for
400,000 people to provide resource domain to merely 300 individuals in a
primitive stage of development’.
Predictably, this judgement has caused a
backlash among Western campaigners. SI’s director calls the decision ‘extremely
alarming’ and has pledged to continue to campaign vigorously for the closure of
the road.
Such comments put paid to the idea that SI
is in anyway humanist in outlook. What organisation, which claims to care about
the welfare of people, would blithely gloss over the fact that the closure of
such a road would leave tens of thousands of people having to travel by sea in
order to reach their island’s only government hospital? The elevation of the
assumed interests of a handful of Jarawa tribespeople above everybody else is
anti-democratic. The Jarawa, after all, are human beings, not an endangered
species of animal or plant (despite one organisation terming them ‘human
ecology’).
And, as I have argued before, the
insistence upon keeping the Jarawa isolated from the modern world does not
prevent the creation of a ‘human zoo’; in fact, this isolation keeps them in
one.
The campaigners calling to keep the Jarawa
isolated argue that contact with people on the Great Trunk Road could spread
disease. But it’s apparent that they don’t just mean germs, but also the spread
of what campaigners see to be another disease – that of modernity. Tracts on
SI’s website include Progress
Can Kill, which presents development as polluted and diseased. As one of
its web pages characterises modern life: ‘Progress = HIV/AIDS, starvation,
obesity, suicide, addiction and the end.’
Certainly these self-appointed Western
guardians of the Jarawa aren’t acting in the interests of the local populations
of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. But in trying to keep the Jarawa preserved
in a kind of cultural formaldehyde, it’s hard to see how they are benefitting
the Jarawa either.
The campaign to preserve the Jarawa is for
the benefit of Westerners who feel bad about modernity; they treat tribes, real
people, like Damien Hirst treats sharks - frozen in time forever, for rich
people to gawp at and feel good about. The Indian Supreme Court is right to
reopen the road, because SI’s attempts to close it really are a road to
nowhere.
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