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Sadiq Khan warns that Tube could be overwhelmed by bedbugs
Have the French bedbugs invaded our tube? Panic as Sadiq Khan warns that London Underground could be overwhelmed by insects which have made life in Paris hell days after enormous bug seen on Victoria line
- Comes after a viral video of a ‘bedbug’ on London’s Victoria Line over weekend
Sadiq Khan has said that the possibility of bedbugs on London’s public transport is a ‘real source of concern’.
The Mayor of London said that he was in contact with officials in Paris after the French capital became overwhelmed by outbreaks of bedbugs, with footage showing them crawling on seats of buses and trains.
Transport for London are said to be keeping an eye on the situation and are disinfecting seats daily as part of its cleaning protocol.
Despite the measures in place, a video went viral over the weekend of what is claimed to be a bedbug on a passenger’s leg on the Victoria line in London.
The video, which has been watched more than a million times, shows a small red bug on the person’s leg.
Sadiq Khan (pictured) has said that the possibility of bedbugs on London’s public transport is a ‘real source of concern’
A video went viral over the weekend of what is claimed to be a bedbug on a passenger’s leg on the Victoria line in London
Experts have warned bed bugs, whose bites cause painful itching, have developed a resistance to the insecticides used to stop them
In response to the threat of bedbugs, Mr Khan told PoliticsJoe: ‘This is a real source of concern. People are worried about these bugs in Paris causing a problem in London.’
Read more: Super-bedbugs are here and almost impossible to kill, experts warn – as outbreak in Paris leads to fears of a return of Victorian-era infestations
He added: ‘I want to reassure those listening that TfL has the best regimes to clean our assets on a nightly basis.
‘We are speaking to our friends in Paris to see if there are any lessons to be learnt but for a variety of reasons we don’t think those issues will arise in London; but there is no complacency from TfL.’
Mr Khan said he had been in regular contact with TfL about the potential outbreak and is ensuring buses, the Tube and the Eurostar are being regularly cleaned.
Attempting to put fears at ease, Adam Juson of the pest control company Merlin Environmental, told The Telegraph that the apparent bedbug featured in the viral video did not appear to be real.
‘It does look sort of like a bedbug but the video is not really good enough to ID from. The bug is not mobile so this could be a remnant from a treatment or one that has got caught on the person’s clothes,’ he said.
‘We have found bedbugs on trains in the past so it’s not beyond the bounds of possibility but this looks wrong.’
Experts have warned the blood-sucking critters, whose bites cause painful itching, have developed a resistance to insecticides.
Eurostar said its trains between London and Paris are to be disinfected if there is the ‘slightest doubt’ of infestation.
Mr Khan said he had been in regular contact with TfL about the potential outbreak and is ensuring buses, the Tube and the Eurostar are being regularly cleaned
Eurostar said its trains between London and Paris are to be disinfected if there is the ‘slightest doubt’ of infestation. It also told MailOnline it plans to increase ‘preventative treatments’ across their entire network but said cases of bedbugs on its trains were ‘extremely rare’
Meanwhile, a major UK hotel chain has started quizzing guests as they check in on whether they have arrived from France.
Rooms of those who have are given a deep clean by pest control experts when they leave.
An outbreak of the blood-sucking insects has provoked a wave of disgust in Paris.
Residents and tourists have taken to social media to post images of bugs crawling across hotel bed sheets and train seats.
Experts say the outbreak in Paris is likely due to residents returning to the capital after spending the summer elsewhere. But it’s also due to the fact that bedbugs are becoming harder to exterminate.
Although they get their name from their habit of nesting in your mattress, bed bugs can also live in sofas, carpets and furniture.
An outbreak of the blood-sucking insects has provoked a wave of disgust in Paris. Residents and tourists have taken to social media to post images of bugs crawling across hotel bed sheets and train seats. In one video posted on the platform yesterday, @jimmytravelsworld showed him picking out bedbugs using tweezers from his bed and under the mattress. ‘When you go to Paris to find love but end up finding bugs living rent free in your bed’, he said. In the video watched more than 44,000 times, he also shared bite marks of his wrists after living in the infected property
The tiny blood-suckers have been caught crawling on train seats and inside Paris’ bustling Charles-de-Gaulle Airport in recent weeks. Travellers have even complained about infestations of the annoying, 5mm critters inside Airbnbs, hotels, cinemas and restaurants. In one video posted to TikTok, seen 3.7million times, influencer @wanderlustfulrosie captured footage of what appears to be bed bugs on a hotel pillow case. ‘BE CAREFUL IN PARIS!!!! There is a bed bug infestation problem!!’, she wrote
Paris’s deputy mayor has claimed ‘no-one is safe’ and demanded urgent action to tackle the ‘scourge’ of bed bugs ahead of the 2024 Olympics. Video footage shared online shows the insects crawling over seats on the Paris metro, on high-speed trains and at Paris’ Charles-de-Gaulle Airport
They hide in small cracks and crevices as narrow as a credit card and mainly feed at night.
Bed bugs, which get to about 7mm, typically spread when they get into clothing or bags which are then taken elsewhere.
While the bugs don’t carry any diseases that sicken humans and their bite is painless, it leaves behind an itchy red mark on areas that are exposed while sleeping.
Although Paris is battling its own invasion of bed bugs, the critters naturally exist in Britain, too.
Data from pest-control company Rentokil in September also showed that from 2022 to 2023, the UK saw a 65 per cent increase in bed bug infestations.
It blamed the resurgence in travel and hotel stays since the pandemic.
At the time, experts also suggested it could be due to more people buying second-hand furniture from resale websites such as eBay and Facebook marketplace.
According to the British Pest Control Association, there are now roughly 12,000 bedbug-related callouts every year.
Eurostar told MailOnline it plans to increase ‘preventative treatments’ across their entire network but said cases of bedbugs on its trains were ‘extremely rare’.
Millennium Hotels and Resorts, which operates 18 hotels in the UK, are asking new guests whether they have travelled from France, according to staff at one of its London hotels.
Meanwhile, staff at the five-star Renaissance Hotel at St Pancras station, the London Eurostar terminus, said no bedbugs have been detected there but staff have received training during the last fortnight on how to spot the pests.
Air France also said if suspected bedbugs are reported on board one of its flights ‘the aircraft would be grounded and a specialist team would immediately be dispatched to confirm or rule out the presence of these insects’.
It comes as experts yesterday warned that failing to tackle Britain’s growing bedbug problem will herald a return of Victorian-era infestations.
Professor James Logan, an insect expert at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and chief executive of research firm Arctech Innovation, told the Mail on Sunday: ‘The insecticides we’ve used for decades to fight these bugs can’t always be relied on any more.
‘Bedbugs in many places have evolved to resist these toxic chemicals.’
He added: ‘The trick is to catch them early before they begin laying eggs.
‘We should be implementing more traps and alert systems to tackle the problem.
‘But we also need to develop new insecticides to avoid infestations becoming commonplace again.’
In France, concerns over the crisis have led to French officials holding crisis talks about the increase in bed bugs, with ministers in Emmanuel Macron’s government promising to ‘rapidly bring answers’ for the public.
The deputy mayor of Paris, Emmanuel Gregoire, last week claimed that ‘no one is safe’ from the ‘scourge’ of bedbugs.
The concerns have gained added weight, with France in the throes of hosting the Rugby World Cup and Paris preparing to welcome thousands of athletes and fans from around the world for the 2024 Olympics.
France’s national health agency recommends people check their hotel beds when travelling and be cautious about bringing second-hand furniture or pre-owned mattresses into their homes.
Once bed bugs are sighted in a home, affected rooms must be treated quickly, it said.
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