<p>A giant python attacked an Indonesian man, nearly severing his arm, before hungry villagers chopped up the reptile and ate it, a police chief said today.<br /><br />Security guard Robert Nababan crossed paths with the giant creature while patrolling an oil palm plantation in the remote Batang Gansal subdistrict of Sumatra island on Saturday.<br /><br />"The python was 7.8 metres long (25.6 feet), it was unbelievably huge," local police chief Sutarja, who like many Indonesians only has one name, told AFP.<br /><br />Sutarja said the 37-year-old Nababan, who sometimes liked to eat snake, tried to catch the giant python and stuff it in a gunny sack.<br /><br />But the huge serpent fought back and bit him on his left arm, nearly severing it from his body.<br /><br />Nababan was then rushed to a hospital in a neighbouring town for treatment.<br /><br />The police chief said the intervention of another security guard and several local residents, one of whom hit the snake with a log, helped to save the man's life.<br /><br />Hungry locals later killed the snake and displayed its body in the village before dicing it up, frying it and feasting on it.<br /><br />Giant python, which regularly top 20 feet in length, are commonly found in Indonesia and the Philippines.<br /><br />In March, a 25-year-old Indonesian farmer has been discovered inside the belly of a giant python after the swollen snake was caught near where the man vanished while harvesting his crops on the eastern island of Sulawesi.</p>
<p>A giant python attacked an Indonesian man, nearly severing his arm, before hungry villagers chopped up the reptile and ate it, a police chief said today.<br /><br />Security guard Robert Nababan crossed paths with the giant creature while patrolling an oil palm plantation in the remote Batang Gansal subdistrict of Sumatra island on Saturday.<br /><br />"The python was 7.8 metres long (25.6 feet), it was unbelievably huge," local police chief Sutarja, who like many Indonesians only has one name, told AFP.<br /><br />Sutarja said the 37-year-old Nababan, who sometimes liked to eat snake, tried to catch the giant python and stuff it in a gunny sack.<br /><br />But the huge serpent fought back and bit him on his left arm, nearly severing it from his body.<br /><br />Nababan was then rushed to a hospital in a neighbouring town for treatment.<br /><br />The police chief said the intervention of another security guard and several local residents, one of whom hit the snake with a log, helped to save the man's life.<br /><br />Hungry locals later killed the snake and displayed its body in the village before dicing it up, frying it and feasting on it.<br /><br />Giant python, which regularly top 20 feet in length, are commonly found in Indonesia and the Philippines.<br /><br />In March, a 25-year-old Indonesian farmer has been discovered inside the belly of a giant python after the swollen snake was caught near where the man vanished while harvesting his crops on the eastern island of Sulawesi.</p>