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Nepali farmer who was bitten by a cobra in his rice paddy field has
killed the snake by repeatedly biting it in return. “A snake charmer
told me that if a snake bites you, bite it until it is dead and nothing
will happen to you,” Mohammed Salmodin told the BBC. He has now been
discharged from hospital where he was being treated for the snake bite.
Officials say he will not be charged because the reptile was not
endangered. “When I realised that a snake had bit me, I went home to get
a torch and saw that it was a cobra. So I bit it to death,” he told BBC
Nepali’s Bikram Niraula in Biratnagar. After he bit the snake to death,
Mr Salmodin said that he went about his daily business as if nothing
had happened. He says he finally agreed to go to hospital after pressure
from family, neighbours and police. The incident took place on Tuesday
in a village 200km (125 miles) south-east of Nepal’s capital, Kathmandu.
The snake he killed is reported to have been the common cobra. Nepal
has a a wide variety of snakes, many of which are venomous – such as the
cobra. Estimates suggest that there are 20,000 cases of snake bite in
Nepal a year, most of them in the Terai southern plains, causing about
1,000 deaths, the AFP news agency reports. Advice for victims of snake
bite can vary, partly because different snakes have different types of
venom.
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