Last Frontiers On The Market
Outlook
|December 31, 2018
Alarm echoes over push for fancy resorts on Andaman and Nicobar, Lakshadweep islands.
IN the age before tourism, these were ‘impure’ heathen homes of cannibals. The chroniclers in the Chola dynasty called them thus. Then these morphed into British penal islands with the wheelshaped Cellular prison, the tenebrous Kalapani, as the painful centerpiece. When the coloni alists left, these windswept, coralfringed atolls and sunsoaked, jungleclad beaches became India’s offgrid frontiers—taken from Burma in exchange for two Manipur districts during the remapping of territory. And they remained so, their raw beauty most ly unexplored and their naked minimalism untouched. But now, Andaman and Nicobar Islands in the east are at the front edge of the conservation versus development battle; as is Lakshadweep to the west.
These two pretty-as-a-peach archipelagos are goldmines waiting to be prospected. And the prospectors will soon fly and sail from the mainland. The government has a ‘holistic’ scheme, a NITI Aayog brainchild for promoting tourism on these islands in collaboration with global hospitality players. In other words, it’s a head to head competition with popular touristy tropical islands around the world to attract foreign and high-rolling vacationers, and their money.
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