Indigenous Tribes at Risk of Extinction After Tsunami
The remote cluster of more than 550 islands, of which only about three dozen are inhabited, is home to six tribes of Mongoloid and African origin who have lived there for thousands of years. Many of these tribal people are semi-nomadic and subsist on hunting with spears, bows and arrows, and by fishing and gathering fruit and roots. They still cover themselves with tree bark or leaves.
"They are a vital link to our prehistoric past. If they are lost, India and the world lose a bit of their glorious heterogeneity," said Ajoy Bagchi, executive director of the People's Commission on Environment and Development, India, which has worked with tribal groups in the region for years.
"Even a small loss in any of these groups, barring the more numerous Nicobarese, could seriously endanger their survival. We need to immediately do a count on how many of them are alive."
[link; from BoingBoing]
Labels: disaster ethics, extinction, tsunami
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Looks like everyone is okay. This article in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, says in part "Groups of rare aboriginal tribes already near the edge of extinction in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands survived a massive tsunami, the Indian coast guard said Thursday. Five tribes totaling 989 people were safe after Sunday's onslaught, including the 100-member Onge, 250 of the fiercely independent Sentinelese, 39 of the almost-extinct Andamanese, 350 of the Jarawa and 250 of the hunter-gatherer Shompen."
- by Karama on Jan 3, 2005 at 3:33 PM | link
And this.
- by Karama on Jan 5, 2005 at 10:56 AM | link