A quiet walk to the garden turned into a nightmare no one saw coming. A mother vanished without a sound. Her sons followed a trail of fear: an empty basket,
trampled grass, then something far worse. What they found in the field changed their lives, their village, and their faith in na… Continues…
On Buton Island, what began as a simple routine became an unimaginable loss. Wa Siti, a 54-year-old mother, stepped out to pick vegetables as she had done countless times before.
When she did not return, her family searched anxiously, clinging to hope until they found her basket abandoned in the grass.
That fragile hope was shattered moments
later when they discovered her entangled in the coils of a 7-meter python that had already begun to consume her.
Villagers rushed in, killed the snake, and pulled her lifeless body free, but the rescue came too late.
Her death stunned the community and echoed far beyond the island. Though such attacks are rare, they are becoming more likely as forests shrink, habitats disappear,
and wildlife is pushed into human spaces. This tragedy is more than a horrifying incident; it is a stark warning about a world where nature,
cornered and starving, is forced into deadly contact with the people who once lived safely beside it.