KHARTOUM (Reuters) – In Khartoum, specialists from Sudan’s Center for Poisonous Species Research are deployed at night in protective vests, gloves, and goggles to catch a snake that residents say has killed a cat, before it has a chance to strike again.
Attacks by snakes and scorpions are more frequent during Sudan’s rainy season, when water levels on the river Nile can rise and send floodwaters surging into communities.
The taskforce says its work is particularly important as doctors do not have antidotes made specifically for the venom of snakes found in Sudan.
(Reporting by Eltayeb Sidding, writing by Nafisa Eltahir, Editing by Alexandra Hudson)