By Frank Kamuntu
There is an island in the Indian Ocean that is so dangerous, that nobody has ever left alive.
North Sentinel Island is one of the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal. It is about five miles long and 4.3 miles wide. It is surrounded by coral reefs and lacks natural harbours. Other than the shore, it is mostly covered in jungle.
None who have stepped foot on the island have lived to tell the tale and all travel has been prohibited. It is not dangerous due to wild animals or toxins, but because of the indigenous people that live there.
The Sentinelese are an uncontacted indigenous tribe of mostly unknown numbers (estimated between 80 and 150 in 2011) who live in voluntary isolation. Since the 1800s, they have defended their island with force.
Sentinelese men fishing on outrigger canoes in 2004Â
In 2006, they killed two fishermen who drifted ashore and in 2018, they killed an American Christian missionary who tried to illegally make contact three times, paying local fishermen to take him to the island so he could convert the tribe.
The islanders are believed to live in groups of lean-to huts and built outrigger canoes they manoeuvre with long poles for fishing.
If they are like the Andamanese people on a nearby island, they likely live on fruits and tubers that grow wild on the island, eggs from seagulls or turtles and small game like wild pigs or birds.
They carry bows and arrows as well as spears and knives, weave mesh baskets and have been heard by boats nearby singing.