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    <div class="articleDetails">By Peter Foster in New Delhi
    February 9, 2006
    </div>

    ONE of the world's last Stone Age tribes has murdered two fishermen whose boat drifted on to a desert island in the Indian Ocean.</p>

    The Sentinelese, thought to number between 50 and 200, have rebuffed all contact with the modern world, firing a shower of arrows at anyone who comes within range.</p>

    They are believed to be the last pre-Neolithic tribe in the world to remain isolated and appear to have survived the 2004 Asian tsunami.</p>

    The men killed, Sunder Raj, 48, and Pandit Tiwari, 52, were fishing illegally for mud crabs off North Sentinel Island, a speck of land in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands archipelago.</p>

    Fellow fishermen said they dropped anchor for the night on January 25 but fell into a deep sleep, probably helped by large amounts of alcohol. During the night their anchor, a rock tied to a rope, failed to hold their open-topped boat against the currents and they drifted towards the island.</p>

    &quot;As day broke, fellow fishermen say they tried to shout at the men and warn them they were in danger,&quot; said Samir Acharya, the head of the Society for Andaman and Nicobar Ecology, an environmental organisation. &quot;However they did not respond - they were probably drunk - and the boat drifted into the shallows where they were attacked and killed.&quot;</p>

    The Indian coast guard tried to recover the bodies using a helicopter but was met by a hail of arrows.</p>

    Photographs shot from the helicopter show the near-naked tribesmen rushing to fire. But the downdraught from its rotors exposed the two fishermen buried in shallow graves and not roasted and eaten, as local rumour suggested.</p>

    Attempts to recover the bodies have been suspended, although the Andaman Islands police chief, Dharmendra Kumar, said an operation might be mounted later.</p>

    Environmental groups urged the authorities to leave the bodies and respect the five-kilometre exclusion zone thrown around the island. In the 1980s and early 1990s many Sentinelese were killed in skirmishes with armed salvage operators who visited the island after a shipwreck. Since then the tribesmen have remained virtually undisturbed.</p>
     

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