Thursday, 23 August 2012

Nepalese Man Bites Snake to Death in Revenge

Newsmen like defining news by the absurdity of a man biting a dog, instead of the more commonplace, dog biting a man.
Well, a Nepalese has taken news oddity a notch higher by sinking his teeth into a venomous snake and killing it with his teeth. It is no longer ‘snake biting a man’, it is a man finishing off a snake with a big bite.
The Nepalese farmer, according to a report said he bit the snake as a revenge. The deadly cobra had bitten him before, according to the police.
Mohamed Salmo Miya was farming near his village 200 kilometres (125 miles) southeast of Kathmandu when he encountered the deadly common cobra, district police chief Uma Prasad Chatrubedi narated.
“A farmer in Bardanga village has killed a white cobra with his teeth out of anger,” he said. “The snake bit him while he was working in his paddy field on Tuesday evening and the man chased it and killed it.”
Miya was treated at a local clinic and is recovering at home.
“I was very angry after the snake bit into me. Then I followed the snake, grabbed it and bit it to death,” the 55-year-old told the Nepali-language Annapurna Post.
“I could have killed it with a stick but I was mad with anger and wanted to take revenge. I killed it with my teeth.”
Nepal has a wide variety of poisonous and non-venomous snakes, which are particularly active during the summer monsoon, including the Indian rock python, which can grow up to 10 metres (33 feet) long, and the deadly king cobra.
Conservative estimates suggest that there are 20,000 cases of snake bites in Nepal a year, almost all in the Terai southern plains, causing around 1,000 deaths.
The two-metre common cobra, which accounts for the majority of bites, is worshipped by Hindus in some parts of Nepal.

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