Ninety passengers aboard an Egypt Air flight from Cairo to Kuwait
could have used actor Samuel L. Jackson this week after a snake
reportedly bit a Jordanian man who smuggled the reptile onboard.
Jackson’s character in the movie “Snakes on a Plane” tries to figure
out how to save the aircraft after crates of hyped-up serpents started
killing the cast.
There wasn’t quite that kind of drama on Monday, but the incident
forced the pilot to make an emergency landing in the Egyptian resort
town of Al Ghardaqa on the Red Sea, according to The Jordan Times.
An Egypt Air official told the paper an investigation revealed that
the 48-year-old passenger, who owns a reptile shop in Kuwait, had hidden
the Egyptian cobra in a carry-on bag. The passenger was trying to
control the snake after it bit his hand and started slithering under the
seats.
The Egyptian daily al-Masry al-Youm reported that the man refused
medical treatment, claiming his wound was only superficial. The plane
resumed its flight to Kuwait after local authorities confiscated the
snake.
Doctors told the passenger he should spend 24 hours in a hospital for
observation, but the man refused, the Egyptian Air official said,
according to The Jordan Times. Egyptian cobras are commonly found across
North Africa.
According to wildlife experts, the cobra’s venom is so deadly it can
kill a full-grown elephant in three hours or a person in about 15
minutes. The venom destroys nerve tissue and causes paralysis and death
because of respiratory failure.
Legend has it that in ancient times, the Egyptian queen Cleopatra
used an Egyptian cobra – also known as an asp – to commit suicide.
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