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FATAL CALLING

US ‘missionary’ shot dead with arrows by remote tribe ‘believed it was his calling from God to convert them to Christianity’

John Allen Chau had reportedly visited the prohibited North Sentinel Island in the Indian Ocean to preach Christianity to the tribe

AN American tourist killed by a tribe on a remote Indian island felt he was called by God to bring the gospel to the uncontacted people.

North Sentinel Island is off-bounds to visitors and home to the Sentinelese, who killed John Allen Chau after he was illegally ferried there by fishermen, officials said.

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Authorities say Chau had made several trips to the Andaman islands recently
: "We have a team out in the waters for reconnaissance and to strategise how to recover his body.

“The team consists of coastal guards, officials from tribal welfare department, forest department officers and police officials."

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The 27-year-old was originally from Alabama, US but had travelled extensively around the worldCredit: Facebook
The tribe reportedly shot the US Citizen with arrows when he arrived on the shore, stock image

Both officials asked for anonymity as they are not authorised to speak to the media.

Chau, 27, had reportedly visited the island hoping to preach Christianity to the tribe.

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Jatin Narwal, Superintendent of Police at Port Blair, told TNM that John was last seen alive on November 16.

He added: "He lived in Alabama, US. He is some kind of paramedic. He was on a misplaced adventure in prohibited area to meet uncontacted persons.

"People thought he is a missionary because he had mentioned his position on god and that he was a believer on social media or somewhere online.

"But in a strict sense, he was not a missionary. He was an adventurer. His intention was to meet the aborigines."

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In the wake of the 2004 tsunami this member of the Sentinelese tribe was photographed firing arrows at a helicopter

A source told AFP: "He tried to reach the Sentinel island on November 14 but could not make it. Two days later he went well prepared. He left the dinghy midway and took a canoe all by himself to the island.

"He was attacked by arrows but he continued walking. The fishermen saw the tribals tying a rope around his neck and dragging his body.

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“They were scared and fled but returned next morning to find his body on the sea shore.”

The island is owned by India but no one is allowed to visit it to prevent the tribe from catching disease  (stock image)
John Allen Chau had gone to the island in an attempt to convert the tribe to Christianity, stock imageCredit: Indian Coast Guard

When they got back to Port Blair on South Andaman Island they told a local preacher, who was a friend of Chau's, what had happened.

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Cops have launched an investigation, Deepak Yadav, a police official in the island chain in the Bay of Bengal, said in a statement late on Tuesday.

A spokeswoman for the United States consulate in India's southern city of Chennai said in an email: "We are aware of reports concerning a U.S. citizen in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

North Sentinel Island, off-bounds to visitors, is home to the Sentinelese, a community of hunter-gatherers who live there isolated from the outside world
The Sentinelese are one of the last peoples on Earth who have not been contacted by the outside worldCredit: © Christian Caron – Creative Commons A-NC-SA
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ALL ALONE Who are the Sentinelese?

THE Sentinelese tribe are an indigenous tribe who have thrived on North Sentinal Island, one of the Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean, for up to 55,000 years.

They have zero contact with the outside world and are actively hostile to anyone who approaches their land.

The small forested island of North Sentinel, which is a similar size to Manhattan, is even off limits to the Indian navy in a bid to protect the tribe of about 150 from being wiped out by disease.

The tribe got international attention after the 2004 tsunami, when a member of the tribe was pictured on a beach, firing arrows at a helicopter inspecting their welfare.

In 2006, two Indian fishermen, who had moored their boat near the island to sleep after fishing near there, were killed when their boat broke loose and drifted onto the shore.

Campaigns by non-profit and local organisations have led the Indian government to abandon plans to contact the Sentinelese.

Survival International, an organisation that campaigns for the rights of tribal people, works to ensure that no further attempts are made to contact the tribe.

"When a U.S. citizen is missing, we work closely with local authorities as they carry out their search efforts," she added, but declined to provide further details over privacy concerns.

Reuters was not immediately able to trace contact details for a family member or representative of Chau.

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One of the police sources said Chau, who had made previous visits to the islands, had a strong desire to meet the Sentinelese.

Chau hired a fishing dinghy and, aided by the fishermen, reached the vicinity of the island on Nov. 16, before transferring to a canoe, the official said.

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His body, spotted the following day by the fishermen on their return, has not yet been retrieved, the official added, although the fishermen who took him there have been arrested.

ISLAND ORGIES The Sentinelese were once observed engaging in group sex by an expedition

THE remote tribe have had virtually no contact with the outside world but the little they have had has been bizarre.

Most of the contact has been violent with the last people known to visit the island being a pair of fisherman whose boat drifted into shore after they moored up nearby in 2006.

The two men were found dead on the beach the following morning.

But one instance decades ago was altogether more baffling as the tribe engaged in group sex on the beach.

Indian anthropologist, Triloknath Pandit, observed the baffling scene on March 29, 1970.

He wrote: "They all began shouting some incomprehensible words. We shouted back and gestured to indicate that we wanted to be friends. The tension did not ease.

"At this moment, a strange thing happened – a woman paired off with a warrior and sat on the sand in a passionate embrace. This act was being repeated by other women, each claiming a warrior for herself, a sort of community mating, as it were.

"Thus did the militant group diminish.

"This continued for quite some time and when the tempo of this frenzied dance of desire abated, the couples retired into the shade of the jungle."



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