Lakshadweep: a history

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The Times of India P Sudhakaran, TNN | Jul 25, 2013

IndianExpress

Contents

Ancient times

The Cheras and the Pallavas

The Laccadive Islands have a history that goes back to the 3rd century BC.

The earliest reference of the island can be found in the Puranuru, an ancient Tamil literature. Sangam literature, Pathitruppaththu, refers to the land as the home of Cheras.

The Pallavas annexed it in the 7th century. According to a few historians, the Pallava inscription of 7th century AD that refers to the island as Dveepa Laksham gives away enough cues on the strong hold of the Pallava dynasty in the region during that time.

The Chola kings

In the 11th century, the place came under the supremacy of the Chola kings and remained under them till around the 14th century.

With its early history predominately referring to Hindu rulers, it is assumed that the local inhabitants of the place were mostly Hindus. However, recent archeological verification has affirmed that the island was also home to many Buddhist settlers in the past.


Muslim rule

By the 14th century, Lakshadweep was ruled by the Muslims. The Muslim rulers not only governed the place but also left a lasting impression on the culture of the land.

By the beginning of the 14th century, the archipelago saw the upsurge of Islamic merchants, who arrived by sea to the island. Apart from the grave of an Arab mercantile named Ubaidulla in Andrott, which dates back to 661 AD, there have also been a few other Muslim tombstones that confirm the existence of Islamism in the island.

During the 17th century, rich Muslim families dominated Lakshadweep. According to a local fable, Chirakkal Raja of the Kolathiri family extended their rule to Lakshadweep islands.

The Arakkal family

It is believed that one of Raja's generals Arakkal, who was married to his daughter, secretly practised Islam. Another legend states that the Chirakkal Raja's daughter was rescued from drowning by a young Muslim boy who gave her his 'mundu' (a long piece of fabric) to cover herself and so she had to marry him. According to the local traditions, when a single boy gives away his 'mundu' to an unmarried girl, the couple is pronounced as husband and wife.

The king was very unhappy as his daughter was married to a poor boy belonging to a lower-caste and made him the ruler of the area, which in turn led to the advent of Muslim rule in the province. In the following years, the Arakkal family became one of the most affluent and influential families in the Malabar Coast and the Lakshadweep islands. The Arakkal family followed the matriarchal system, which meant that the first-born, whether male or female, would rule the province.

The supremacy of the Arakkal family continued even after the invasion of the Portuguese and the Dutch rulers in the 17th century. Once the British East Indian Company completely took over the region in the 18th century, the Arakkal clan was forced to cede its power to the colonial rulers.

From 1545 to 1819, the islands of Androth, Kavaratti, Agathi, Minicoy and Kalpeni were in the possession of the Arakkal family, which ruled the North Kerala coast and is based in Kannur.

Portuguese Rule

Meanwhile, the islet saw the growing influences of the Portuguese. The descriptions given by Marco Polo about the islands attracted many Portuguese merchants to the place who profited from the coir trade in the region.

Dutch interlude

Soon the Dutch also followed but there control in the region was short lived as the local inhabitants drove them out.

British Raj

Just when the Arakkal kings began to monopolize the place, the islands of Amini, Kadmat, Kiltan, Chetlat and Bitra were captured by Tipu [Sultan] in 1787. However, soon the land fell into the hands of the British after the third Anglo-Mysore War. During that period, the islands were a part of South Karnataka. Soon the British seized the remaining islands from the Lakshadweep archipelago from the Arakkal family. The Arakkal clan was given an annual sum in return and all the islands that came to be govern by the colonial officials.

Five islands of Lakshadweep, which were under Arakkal rule, were given to the British on December 15, 1908, after a prolonged battle. In return, it was decided that Rs 23,000 would be given annually in 12 monthly instalments to the ruler of the family. Besides, a one-time compensation of Rs 70,000 was also given.

Post-Independence

Like the rest of India, the islands also went through some changes with respect to its territories, post independence. In 1956, the state reorganization act detached the islands from the Malabar Coast. Despite the place being dominated by Malayalis, the Indian government segregated its administrative head from the main sub-continent, making it a separate Union Territory by grouping the isles together and declaring Kavaratti the capital of Lakshadweep islands.

2013 Arakkal family's demands

Pay more or return Lakshadweep: Arakkal family demands

In 2013 the Arakkal family raised an apparently bizarre demand after the row over the disputed KeyiRubath property in Saudi Arabia. The only Muslim family to have ruled a kingdom in the state has asked the Union government to either return the Lakshadweep Islands to it or revise the malikhana (compensation) being given to it.

In 1908, when the family signed the final deal with the British, the price of gold was Rs 3.30 per sovereign, says the current generation. "If you look at the present gold prices, we are entitled to Rs 13 crore a year as compensation,” claimed Adi Raja Muhammed Rafi, son of the then [2013] ‘royal’ head Sainaba Aysha Beevi.

"The demand might sound weird but we have justification for the same," said Rafi, a trustee of the Arakkal royal trust that raised the demand. Rafi said the family of 150 was struggling to finance its royal rituals and maintain its infrastructure, which includes four mosques.

"At that time [Rs 23,000 a year] was a huge amount, but even after over 100 years, we are being given the same amount. We feel humiliated to take the beevi every month to the treasury to collect the monthly instalment of Rs 1,916.12," Rafi said. "The beevi is now bedridden. While all the royal families are given various benefits, including pension, we are denied the respect we deserve."

[A month before Rafi’s demand, in June 2013 the Kerala government decided to give a monthly pension of Rs 2,500 each to 826 members of the Kozhikode-based Zamorin royal family. The Zamorins had ruled the Malabar coast for several centuries.]

He said the palace of the family, Arakkal kettu, was declared a protected monument by the archaeological department but it was facing neglect. "If we calculate the present value of the amount settled with the company for the islands, it would run into crores. We are not demanding a huge amount but a reasonably good sum required for a respectable living for the royal family that gave its assets to the state."

Mohammed Koyamma Adiraja, another trust member, said the issue was brought to the attention of the state and the central governments in 2010 as well.

The family had [around 2012] entered into a dispute over the Rs 5,000-crore compensation from the Saudi government for demolishing Keyi Rubath, a bungalow built in Mecca for Haj pilgrims from Kerala, with the Keyi family.

2021: unrest on tranquil islands

Politicians say Praful Khoda Patel is turning Lakshadweep into 'another Kashmir' PTI K.A. Shaji Additional reporting by Anita Joshua | 25.05.21


The new administrator of Muslim-majority Lakshadweep has been accused of moving to ban beef-eating and cattle transport, cracking down on protests and destroying the fishing infrastructure.

Patel is the first politician since Independence to be appointed administrator — the islands’ topmost official authority — with all his predecessors having been civil servants.

Polticians pointed to several of his actions: the expulsion of non-vegetarian food from school midday meals and hostel dining halls; a two-child norm for panchayat poll contestants that mirrors a parivar prejudice against Muslims; the dismissal of 2,000 temporary government workers.

“His (amendment of the 1994 panchayati raj rules) to not allow people with more than two children into local bodies itself,” Balram, [politician], told this correspondent.

Of the 36 islands that make up the Union Territory, only 10 have a human presence. The overwhelming majority of Lakshadweep’s 65,000-odd people are Muslim.

Gag on dissent

Lakshadweep MP and Nationalist Congress Party leader Muhammed Faizal said that Patel had enforced the “Control of Goonda Act on the islands, where crime is rare, only to make people insecure so they don’t protest against his dictatorial regime”.

“All the posters and boards erected here against the National Register of Citizens and the Citizenship Amendment Act have been removed,” Faizal said.

The Control of Goonda Act allows arrests without warrants and facilitates long detentions.

Fishing blow

Apart from moving to stop the sale, consumption, storage and transport of beef in a Union Territory where meat and fish are staple diets, Patel has cracked down on the fishing community that makes up more than 80 per cent of the local population.

His administration has removed their temporary huts, sheds, boats, net-drying facilities and storage spaces from the shores citing violation of coastal zone norms.

Liquor licences

With Muslims making up “over 96 per cent of the population” of Lakshadweep, “in accordance with the religious and cultural beliefs of the community, the consumption of alcohol was banned on the islands”, Viswam has written to Kovind.

“However, in a recent decision, the administration has begun issuing liquor licences under the guise of promoting tourism and individual freedom, thereby completely ignoring the socio-cultural context of the area,” Viswam’s letter says.

“The islands had effectively kept away Covid till last December through social distancing and adherence to the protocols. But they are now witnessing many positive cases after the administrator lifted all Covid regulatory norms,” Faizal said.

He said that people arriving from outside were earlier required to quarantine themselves but Patel relaxed those norms in the name of promoting tourism.

As a result, Lakshadweep has seen “over 4,000 cases with over 20 deaths already”, Viswam has written to Kovind. “Further, the pressure on the health infrastructure of the islands has increased manifold leaving the population vulnerable and worried.”

Kerala snub

CPM Rajya Sabha member Elamarom Kareem, who has written to Kovind seeking Patel’s recall, said the administrator had instructed ship and boat operators to ignore the ancient port of Beypore in north Kerala and prefer Mangalore port in south Karnataka when they sail to the mainland.

“The islanders speak Malayalam and are culturally connected to Kerala. Beypore port has been the link between the mainland and the islands for generations. Now the administrator is trying to sever the link between the island natives and Kerala,” Kareem said.

Sacking spree

Viswam said over 2,000 temporary government servants had been sacked in the past six months even before completing their tenures and suggested the motive was sectarian.

“The administrator has also sealed off 38 Anganwadi centres, meant to provide nutritious food to children and pregnant or lactating women. The tourism department has fired 109 employees under the administrator’s orders,” he said.

All this was done on the plea that these Anganwadis and posts were redundant. But many islanders fear the agenda is to fill the posts later with non-Muslims from Kerala and Karnataka.

Environment

A Lakshadweep Development Authority Regulation, 2021, has been drafted to facilitate the “progressive development of land in both urban and rural areas” and to confer additional powers for acquisition. The islanders fear this will hurt the archipelago’s fragile and diverse ecosystem.

Patel became Gujarat home minister in 2010 after Amit Shah had to vacate the post following the Sohrabuddin Sheikh encounter case. Patel stayed in the job till 2012.


Opposition parties stepped up their campaign seeking recall of Lakshadweep administrator Praful Khoda Patel - Telegraph India Lakshadweep: Opposition parties turn up heat against Praful Patel PTI | 26.05, 21


Lakshadweep MP and Nationalist Congress Party leader Muhammed Faizal said: “The island is being surrendered to big corporates. A 15 metre wide road is being planned for tourism on an island of 3.5sqkm. This is being done after evacuating the people from their land. Such steps are being taken to serve whose interests?”

The administrator unilaterally implements his agenda without adequate consultation with the people, Faisal claimed and called for protests against the “anti-people” measures.


Court setback

The Lakshadweep administration suffered a setback as Kerala High Court on Tuesday stayed its order directing the Assistant Public Prosecutor (APP) to attend pending legal works of various government departments, instead of carrying out his duties in the courts there.

The court granted the stay on a PIL by an islander Mohammed Saleem challenging the administration’s directive to the APP posted in Andrott and Amini islands, to attend to legal works of several departments, including preparation of chargesheet to help the police.

Lakshadweep is under the jurisdiction of Kerala High Court.

8 quit BJP in Lakshadweep over new laws The Times of India 27 May 2021


The chorus within BJP for Lakshadweep administrator Praful Patel’s recall has grown louder, with eight members of the party’s Yuva Morcha resigning in the past two days and several more indicating they might do likewise in protest against “plain autocratic governance”.

Former Yuva Morcha general secretary P P Mohammed Hashim said others still in the organisation were just as frustrated over the administrator’s decisions and proposals, including a blanket beef ban and a new draft regulation for prevention of anti-social activities. “We joined BJP with the intention of bringing development to the islands. But the administrator doesn’t listen to anyone and foists his orders on us,” he said.

‘Patel’s rule is disrupting the life of islanders’

Hashim said they decided to quit as the administrator’s rule is disrupting the life of the islanders..

Hashim said the statements of BJP functionaries in Kerala against Lakshadweep amid the crisis had been hurtful, too. “A senior member from Kerala said before the media that terrorist activities and drug trafficking were going on in Lakshadweep. If you have ever been to Lakshadweep, you would know how peaceful this place is. They are planning to put the blame on the islanders even for seizure of contraband from boats in the sea, several nautical miles away from the islands.”

Lakshadweep is among the country's least crime-prone regions, according to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB). The 2019 NCRB report shows the archipelago reported no case of murder, kidnapping, rape, robbery and dacoity.

The islanders are suspicious of the draft prevention of anti-social activities regulation because it proposes to vest immense powers on the administrator, including clauses allowing detention of a person for six months to a year just to “prevent him from acting in any manner prejudicial to the maintenance of public order”.

“Does Lakshadweep have history of such serious crime or terrorism? So, basically what they are intending to do is to scare the people,” said Mohammed Faizal PP, the MP representing the archipelago.

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