Ali Khan Samsuddin from Malaysia, who was popularly referred to as the ‘Snake King’ attributable to his daring acts with snakes and scorpions, allegedly died after a cobra bit him on the hand in 2006. His son, Amjad Khan is now persevering with the legacy of his father’s snake and scorpion exhibits. He stated that this commerce has been handed down for 5 generations and he can’t think about doing anything of their life.
In 1997, the Snake King of Malaysia stayed in a glass field with greater than 5,000 scorpions for 21 days. He additionally stayed with 400 snakes for 40 days. In over 25 years of his profession, Ali Khan Samsuddin was bitten greater than 99 instances by quite a lot of snakes however by no means proved deadly sufficient to take his life. His final present allegedly took place in Kuala Lumpur when a cobra bit him on his hand.
After a present in Kuala Lumpur, Ali Khan Samsuddin known as his son Amjad Khan and informed him {that a} cobra had bitten him on his hand. As per media stories, the snake king has been hit by cobras 3 times in his life. However, just a few nights after the chew by a cobra throughout his Kuala Lumpur present, Ali Khan began to really feel sick and was admitted to a hospital as an emergency. Amjad Khan believes that his father succumbed to his accidents from the chew attributable to diabetes. “It may need made it more durable for him to struggle off the cobra’s poison” added Amjad Khan because the Daily Star report reported.
In a bid to proceed the legacy, Amjad Khan reportedly kissed the identical snake that killed his father- a king cobra- throughout a TV present known as World’s Most Talented 2015. As per the report of Mail, Amjad Khan is now referred to as ‘The Snake Prince’ due to his capacity to attraction snakes with hypnotic strategies. He has been kissing the snakes along with his father as a toddler. While talking to the presenter, Laura Jackson of the present, Amjad Khan stated that he was ten per cent fearful of the King Cobra earlier than the kiss attributable to his father’s demise.
first printed: April 01, 2024, 10:23 IST