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Andaman’s Onge tribe king, queen welcome baby boy, population now 136

Hospital sources confirmed that both the mother and child are healthy and doing well. "We kept them under observation in the tribal ward, and they will be discharged in a day or two," said a senior hospital staff member.

AndamanThe Onge tribe, though not considered "un-contacted" like the Sentinelese who reside on North Sentinel Island, are confined to Dugong Creek. (Representational/ File Photo)

Andaman’s Onge tribe king Totoko and queen Priya welcomed a baby boy on Monday at GB Panth Hospital in here, bringing the tribe’s total population to 136, an official said.

The baby, weighing around 2.5 kg, was born around 5.55 pm through a normal delivery. This is Totoko’s eighth child, an official of the tribal welfare department said.

Union Tribal Minister Arjun Munda expressed his happiness about the news, saying, “It gives me immense pleasure to announce the arrival of a new member of the Onge tribe in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

I congratulate Totoko and Priya on this wonderful news. I will instruct the local administration to take good care of the mother and child.” Munda also highlighted ongoing efforts to protect Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) in the region through various central schemes.

Hospital sources confirmed that both the mother and child are healthy and doing well. “We kept them under observation in the tribal ward, and they will be discharged in a day or two,” said a senior hospital staff member.

The Onge tribe, though not considered “un-contacted” like the Sentinelese who reside on North Sentinel Island, are confined to Dugong Creek.

The birth of the baby boy was met with jubilation throughout the Onge community. Traditionally semi-nomadic and reliant on hunting and gathering, the Onges now receive rations and clothing from the local administration, despite initially not being accustomed to wearing clothes.

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Since the establishment of the penal settlement by the British in 1858, the populations of primitive tribes like the Onge, Jarawa, Shompen, Great Andamanese, and Sentinelese have drastically declined due to epidemics, exploitation in exchange for alcohol, and confrontations with the British.

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