Scroll.in review of 'Islands in Flux - the Andaman and Nicobar Story
This book tells us why we need to talk about the Andaman and Nicobar islands urgently
The little-known history of the islands is accessible and engrossing in campaigner Pankaj Sekhsaria’s ‘Islands in Flux’.
For over two decades, researcher and campaigner Pankaj
Sekhsaria has been writing about the state of environmental, social and
political affairs in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. Islands in Flux: The Andaman and Nicobar Story brings
together the bulk of his reportage since 2000 on key issues affecting
the islands. Though this isn’t (as the author himself notes) a
comprehensive history of the islands in that time frame, it is a solid
beginning in understanding the unique conditions of an area whose
complexities are largely ignored by the mainland.
Sekhsaria is
quick to point out that the islands are misunderstood and
underrepresented in the Indian media. He refers to the “marginalisation
of the islands in the nation’s consciousness.” The original communities
of the islands are the Great Andamanese, the Onge, the Jarawa, and the
Sentinelese. In the early years of India’s independence, the government
devised a plan to colonise the islands. As a part of this plan,
thousands of settlers from the mainland were incentivised with land and
timber to settle in the island. The timber-rich forests were opened up
to exploitation. In the last century, which has seen unprecedented
population growth at the islands, approximately a 10th of the forested
land has been wiped out.
Island in danger
The
islands are home to unique flora and fauna which have been endangered
by aggressive developmental policies. In one of several examples, the
logging is noted to have threatened the populations of the saltwater
crocodile and the endemic wild pig. We learn that the islands are an
important nesting spot for turtles, including the giant leatherback
turtle which is critically endangered, which is threatened by sand
mining and a growing population of dogs.
The colonisation of the
islands by mainlanders has also had the effect of drastically
endangering and outnumbering the indigenous, tribal population.
Sekhsaria notes in one example:
In
the early 1960s, the Onge were the sole inhabitants of Little Andaman.
Today, for each Onge, there are at least 120 outsiders, and this
imbalance is rapidly increasing.
Of the first three
tribes mentioned above, the Jarawa tribe survived the onslaught of
forced development the longest. Sekhsaria narrates how their “hostility
and self-maintained isolation in the impenetrable rainforests” insulated
them from the changing times. But the construction of the Andaman Trunk
Road in the heart of their territory forced them to slowly abandon
their self-contained way of life.
One of the other themes explored in Islands in Flux
is the role of naming in colonisation. He points out that a singular
theory is popular on the mainland about the origin of the name Andaman –
that it comes from the Hindu figure of Hanuman – even though historical
accounts document various theories. He criticises the calls to rename
the islands after freedom fighters as dismissive of the identity and
history of the local tribes. The islands had already been re-christened
by the British. Sekhsaria says: “If the real and complete history of the
islands is ever written, the British would be no more than a page and
India could only be a paragraph.”
Sekhsaria takes us through the
complex journey of the islands in the last two decades. In response to a
distressing report on the state of the islands’ forests by a
court-appointed commission, the Supreme Court ruled that sand-mining
operations had to be phased out and the Andaman Trunk Road closed.
Outsiders versus insiders
But
as we read on, we discover that economic and political interests led to
a wilful non-compliance of these orders. Throughout the book, the
author highlights how the tribes’ interests are not protected, their
land and people exploited and how they are not consulted in policy
decisions.
He narrates the conflicts over land between the
settlers and the tribes. In particular, the story of the Jarawa people
is told in animated detail as small groups of them begin to unexpectedly
emerge from the territory they had earlier fiercely kept themselves to.
No one was allowed to enter their land, and they did not venture out
either until the late 90s. This tribe has dwindled to a meagre 250
individuals. As Sekhsaria puts it, for them it “is literally a struggle
for survival and against extinction.”
The little-known history of
the islands is accessible and engrossing in Sekhsaria’s sympathetic,
painstaking prose. Sekhsaria is hopeful that if change arrives, even at
this late juncture, it will save the tribes from extinction and the
islands from complete decimation. This is an important book for its
lessons on the environment, on India’s uneasy and problematic
relationship with some of its territories and on the implications of
forcing development and modernisation on indigenous communities.
The book is available in stores and via amazon: http://tinyurl.com/y9pnz9ml Islands in Flux: The Andaman and Nicobar Story, Pankaj Sekhsaria, Harper Collins.
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