France is on edge over the resurgence of blood-sucking bedbugs across the country, as concerns mount over whether could impact the Olympics in Paris next year.
"No one is safe," Emmanuel Grégoire, the first deputy mayor of Paris, on Friday.
People have spotted the critters in recent days on France's high-speed trains, in the Paris metro and in the city's Charles-de-Gaulle Airport — in some cases posting videos of the bugs on social media — .
Earlier this year, the French government agency ANSES that 11% of French households had bedbugs between 2017 and 2022, and the infestations weren't correlated to wealth.
A jump in travel and bedbugs' growing resistance to insecticides are among the primary reasons driving a spike in infestations, the agency noted.
that he had asked Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne to organize a conference on the battle against bedbugs, calling it a public health issue. He also sent a letter to Borne calling for an "action plan" to deal with the insects, .
Grégoire said it's the responsibility of owners and insurers to eradicate the invasive species, and that in Paris the costs are typically covered for poorer households.
French transportation minister Clément Beaune also joined the bedbug banter, that he would bring transportation operators together this week to provide information on efforts to help travelers. The goal was to "reassure and protect," he said.
The bedbug dread comes as Paris prepares to host the summer Olympics in July and August of 2024.
But Grégoire said, , that the insects pose "no threat to the Olympic Games" and instead provide a chance for people to work together to combat them.
Bedbugs are that frequently hide in furniture and bite humans to feed on their blood.
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