This Week in Asia

Death by snakebite: new murder weapon of choice in India

There's a new weapon of choice for cold-blooded Indian murderers: venomous snakes.

In the latest case, a Kerala court convicted a wildlife expert on Monday of murdering his wife in May 2020 by putting a cobra - which he had starved for a week to make aggressive - into her bed as she lay in a deep sleep, induced by a sedative he had given her.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The man, known only as Sooraj, 27, had bought the cobra from a snake-charmer about two months after the failure of a previous attempt to kill his wife Uthra. In his previous attempt he had used a viper, but his wife recovered from the bite.

Experts told the court that a natural, or accidental, snakebite typically measured up to 1.8cm but that in this case the bite was nearly 2.8cm. That strongly suggested Sooraj had provoked the snake, they said.

The verdict in Kerala came just days after Supreme Court judges warned of a disturbing "new trend" in Rajasthan, where snakes were being used as murder weapons.

The judges were hearing an application for bail for Krishna Kumar, one of three people accused of murder. His lawyer, Aditya Chaudhary, posed the question to the judges: "Is it possible for a murder accused to have been nowhere near the crime scene and for no murder weapon to have been found and yet still be guilty?"

Yes, said the judges. If, that is, the murder weapon happened to be a snake.

On this basis, they dismissed Chaudhary's argument that there was nothing to link Kumar with the crime as he had never visited the house of the woman, Subodh Devi, who was murdered in Rajasthan in 2019.

Cobras can be murder weapons, in the wrong hands. Photo: Adam Francis

The prosecution told the court that Devi's daughter-in-law, Alpana, had been having an affair while her soldier-husband (Devi's son) was away on duty. Devi had found out about the affair and demanded Alpana end the affair; Alpana and her lover then allegedly went to a snake-charmer with their friend Kumar and bought the snake for 10,000 rupees (US$132). They left the snake in a bag near Devi's bed while she was sleeping; it bit Devi and she died.

Since snakebite deaths are common in Rajasthan, the police did not initially suspect foul play. However, this changed when it emerged the pair had exchanged 124 telephone calls on the day of Devi's death.

"How could [Kumar] be a part of the conspiracy when no one could predict whom the snake would bite?" Chaudhary asked.

The judges rejected his argument. "This is a new trend in which people buy poisonous snakes from snake charmers and kill a person through the snake's bite. This is now becoming common in Rajasthan," they said.

According to the World Health Organization, around 58,000 Indians suffer snakebites every year.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2021. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

More from This Week in Asia

This Week in Asia5 min readWorld
Are US Interests The Real Target Of China's 'Puzzling' New Partnership With Bahrain?
Two weeks after China and Bahrain agreed to form a comprehensive strategic partnership (CSP), analysts remain baffled by Beijing's decision to offer its strongest form of diplomatic alliance to the tiny Persian Gulf kingdom, with some saying the pact
This Week in Asia4 min read
'Do They Need It?' Influencer Scholarships In Indonesia Spark Concerns About Use Of Student Aid
Have a huge following on social media? In Indonesia, that might mean you are eligible for one of the many beasiswa influencer (influencer scholarships) now being touted by a number of private universities across the country. These scholarships - whic
This Week in Asia4 min read
Chinese Involvement In Indonesia Mining Project Sparks Protests, Concerns Of Environmental Disaster
An Indonesian community is protesting against the involvement of the Chinese government in a zinc and lead mine in North Sumatra, citing the region's earthquake-prone nature and the high risk that could result in environmental disaster. Twenty-five r

Related