The Jarawa tribe lives in the Andaman Islands in the Indian Ocean in nomadic groups of 50. They migrated there from Africa and now there are about 400 of them.
They hunt with bows and arrows, fish in coral reefs, and collect fruits and honey.
In the 1990s, the Indian government wanted to provide them with more modern living conditions, but Yarava refused.
For 55,000 years, the tribe lived quietly, hunting, fishing and gathering, but other people reached them and built a road.
Promotional video:
Now tourists come here, who are accused of treating Yarava like "animals in a safari park."
Poachers began to visit the rich forests of the reclusive islands and hunt for the game that the tribe needs to survive.
The tribe now numbers about 400, but there are fears that they could be wiped out within the next ten years.
It is believed that the age of Yarava is from 50 to 55 thousand years. See more …