India's claim to sovereignty over the islands is not enough to succeed and more to lose, and it is embarrassing to be slapped in the face
In the Gulf of Bengal in the Indian Ocean, the Andaman Islands are home to an indigenous tribe that has lived for 60,000 years, and this island belongs to the Andaman Kingdom, but until now, no one knows what it is: the Andaman people call North Sentinai the North Outpost Island.
Because North Outpost Island is at the forefront of the Andaman Islands and is located in the passage of the Strait of Malacca, it has always been valued by India.
In 188, the Indians, still a British colony, sent their first troops to North Outpost Island. After six days of searching, they caught six natives, two of them were old people and four small children, and they took them to Andaman because they tortured two adults, which led to many accusations, and finally the Indians could only send the four children back to the North Outpost Island, and since then, the natives of the North Outpost Island have become mortal enemies with these foreigners.
Since the 1960s, major scientific research institutions in the United Kingdom, India, and the United States have failed to reach an effective communication with the local population, and even caused many frictions. The most serious one was in 1981, when an Indian cargo ship broke anchor on the coast and landed on the island with **, triggering a fierce battle that killed at least 1 3 of the indigenous population, leaving only 39 of the original 300 indigenous population in 2011.
At the behest of India, the United States, with the help of the Andaman people, provided a large amount of food and drinking water to the local indigenous population in exchange for their friendship. In addition, the Indians extracted the blood of the natives without permission, which weakened the immunity of the natives, and many people died as a result. Scientists in the United States left in anger, rejecting India's scientific expedition to the Andaman Islands, and India was forced to designate a three-kilometer quarantine zone around the North Outpost Island, halting research and not allowing anyone to approach.
After the 2004 Bay of Bengal Massacre**, the Indian authorities sent a helicopter into the investigation, but the indigenous people objected to it by firing arrows, and finally had to leave in disgrace. One of the three missions was in 2006, when two Indians were fishing on the Andaman Island and accidentally broke into the North Outpost Island and were shot dead, the only time they saw the natives.
The residents of the Andaman were very dissatisfied with this decision, and when the Indian official announced that the North Outpost Island was their private property, the Andaman official also issued a statement: The North Outpost Island is an independent island, and no country has ever owned the North Outpost Island, and no country has ever owned the North Outpost Island, so the Andaman official has no intention of interfering with these aborigines, nor does it intend to invade them.
The Andaman was slapped in the face and made the surrounding countries laugh.
In 2009, the World Human Rights Organization (WHR) listed the North Outpost Island as a priority area and distributed various supplies to the indigenous people from time to time, but India** has remained silent.