Businessman sees profits slither away

Published 5:00 am Friday, September 24, 2010

Various species of cobras can be found in Asia, Africa and South America, among other places. Recently, several hundred of them were found in the Chinese village of Xianling — much to the dismay of local residents.

XIANLING VILLAGE, China — Local businessman Cai Yong thought it would be a good idea to buy 3,000 cobra eggs and then hatch the snakes at an abandoned school building in homemade cages of plywood, brick and netting.

It wasn’t.

Cai’s plan to make money by selling cobra venom for traditional Chinese medicine fell apart when more than 160 of the serpents slithered through a hole in the wall and threw the remote village of Xianling into bedlam.

Starting at the beginning of this month, cobras were spotted in outhouse toilets, kitchens, front yards and the mah-jongg parlor in this speck of a farming community in southwest China.

“I saw one in the bathroom,” said Zhang Suli, the 47-year-old wife of a local corn and rice farmer. “I was scared, and I started screaming.”

The Mid-Autumn Festival holiday this week, when Chinese celebrate the season’s harvest moon, hasn’t been an auspicious one for the residents of Xianling.

First, there was the cobras-gone-wild story, which veered between slapstick and terror. Then an apparent government clampdown followed, in which officials declared that most of the snakes had been captured and all was well, assertions that many locals didn’t believe.

Perhaps more than anything, the episode is a reminder that no problem or locale is too remote for the Chinese Communist Party’s efforts to enforce its notion of a “harmonious society” in which there’s no social upset. Even when it comes to cobras in the bathroom.

The ones that got away

Walking up a path that led to the village amid small rice fields and rolling hills, Guan Xinyu paused to say that local officials were more interested in clamping down any sign of trouble than in rounding up the snakes. Like several others interviewed in the area, Guan said that while the 1,500-plus cobras that didn’t escape were hauled off, he hadn’t seen anyone trying to catch the ones that got away.

“The government is scared of people panicking because these snakes are dangerous,” said Guan, a 64-year-old villager who does construction work in the city of Chongqing, a little less than 50 miles to the north. “I know they didn’t catch all the snakes.”

When a McClatchy reporter visited Xianling earlier this week, the vice mayor of the nearest town, Shijiao, was on hand to offer assurances and select the villagers whom he thought should be interviewed. “It’s safe here,” said Vice Mayor Wei Zhaozhong, who’d ridden up the dirt road to the village in a police car. “We would like to talk about that.”

Wei introduced a man by the name of Tan Bin. “I think the government takes care of the people,” said Tan, who claimed to have no job, although he was relatively well dressed and his cell phone kept ringing. “The upper leadership cares. They came here and took care of things.”

Wei also invited the reporter to talk to Wang Yunping, who works for the local forestry department.

Wang started to explain that the villagers had nothing to worry about because the snakes that escaped were young and small.

“The snakes were only this big,” Wang said, holding his fingers a couple of inches apart.

A woman in the crowd interjected, “No, they were this big,” holding her hands about a foot apart. When Wei flashed a look at the woman, she quickly disappeared, but pictures of the cobras in state media tend to support her description.

Are they gone yet?

Officials recently have delivered snakebite serum to the village, though only the breeder has been hurt so far, and given lectures about cobras. The government of Shijiao issued a notice last week detailing how the snakes got loose and telling residents that almost all of them had been caught. A government-run newspaper in Chongqing carried a story with the same message.

All of which left Wei Yuanxiang with one pressing question: “The government says there aren’t any cobras left, so why are people still seeing them?”

Wei, a 56-year-old who grows corn and tends a dozen pigs, unfolded a government statement that said that of 160 escaped snakes, 159 had been captured and one was killed. It also said, without explanation, that a few might still be loose.

“The government just wants to get this matter finished,” he said.

Marketplace