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Benedict Allen defends not taking phone or GPS on Papua New Guinea expedition: 'I'm an expert in survival' | Benedict Allen defends not taking phone or GPS on Papua New Guinea expedition: 'I'm an expert in survival' |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The explorer Benedict Allen has defended his decision to set off into the Papua New Guinea jungle without any means to contact the outside world by saying: “I’m an expert in survival.” | The explorer Benedict Allen has defended his decision to set off into the Papua New Guinea jungle without any means to contact the outside world by saying: “I’m an expert in survival.” |
The 57-year-old British explorer was evacuated by helicopter from a remote airstrip last week, after falling ill with malaria. | |
He had missed a scheduled flight to Hong Kong, and his family feared he had been attacked by drug dealers or other “bad people”. | |
Mr Allen did not take a satellite phone or GPS module on his expedition to contact the Yaifo tribe. | Mr Allen did not take a satellite phone or GPS module on his expedition to contact the Yaifo tribe. |
Defending his choice during an interview on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, he said exploring is “not about asserting yourself or imposing yourself, it’s about the opposite – it’s about being vulnerable, learning from the experts, and they’re the local people”. | |
“That means being on a level with the local people, and that means not being able to be whisked away whenever you feel like it because you feel a bit ill. I’m a professional. I’m an expert in survival,” he added. | “That means being on a level with the local people, and that means not being able to be whisked away whenever you feel like it because you feel a bit ill. I’m a professional. I’m an expert in survival,” he added. |
His greatest worry about not having a phone was being out of contact in the event one of his children suffered an accident back home in London, he said. | His greatest worry about not having a phone was being out of contact in the event one of his children suffered an accident back home in London, he said. |
Mr Allen said he was “slightly bewildered” by the attention his plight had generated, and argued that it was not a publicity stunt. | |
He said he filmed the entire trip. “You can see me deteriorating with malaria; there was clear footage of me, and perhaps the worst moment of all was when I had to read, or say to the camera, ‘Look, if you don’t find me and you just find this footage, please take it along to the embassy.’ ... I showed photos of my children.” he said. | |
Speaking from west London, he said “massive” storms had swept away a key bridge and soaked his anti-malarial tablets. A tribal war also meant he could not proceed as planned. | |
Broadcaster Ben Fogle told the programme: “In 2017, I think with the technology that we have, it’s a bit foolhardy to head off without a GPS, without a satellite phone, and to put your family through the stress and worry.” | |
Afua Hirsch, a writer and broadcaster, said trips like Mr Allen’s were ”troubling”, and that she saw “a real continuity” between coverage of it and the language used by colonial-era expeditions. | Afua Hirsch, a writer and broadcaster, said trips like Mr Allen’s were ”troubling”, and that she saw “a real continuity” between coverage of it and the language used by colonial-era expeditions. |
She said: ”This isn’t about the individual motives of people that go off to seek contact with hitherto uncontactable people. This is about a system and a context. | She said: ”This isn’t about the individual motives of people that go off to seek contact with hitherto uncontactable people. This is about a system and a context. |
“For centuries, if you look at the history of explorers and the genre of explorer writing and adventure telling, it is often to find black and other non-white ethnic groups, cultures and people – and treat them in the same way as they would treat an exotic species of plant or wildlife. | |
“It’s this gaze that regards the European as the civilised person who travels around, exposing the exotic in other parts of the world, that I think is troubling. | “It’s this gaze that regards the European as the civilised person who travels around, exposing the exotic in other parts of the world, that I think is troubling. |
“If you look back at some of the adventure writing from the 15th and 16th century that described ‘savages’, the word that was often used, I see a real continuity with some of the language and the press coverage around explorers today. | |
“That’s not to say that individual explorers are trying to be racist in any way.” | “That’s not to say that individual explorers are trying to be racist in any way.” |
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