Can humans and rats live together? Paris is trying to find out
Can humans and rats live
together?
That’s
what city leaders in Paris are trying to find out. The French capital, like
many metropolises, has a notorious rodent problem.
Paris
Mayor Anne Hidalgo is forming a committee to study “cohabitation” – to what
extent humans and rodents can live together – one of her deputies said Thursday
during a city council meeting.
Anne
Souyris, Paris’ deputy mayor in charge of public health, announced the move in
response to questions from Geoffroy Boulard, the head of Paris’ 17th
arrondissement and a member of the center-right Republican party.
Boulard
had called upon the city government to outline a more ambitious plan against
the proliferation of rats in public spaces.
He
has previously criticized Hidalgo, a member of the center-left socialist party,
for not doing enough to eliminate rats from Paris, including during strikes earlier
this year which saw garbage pile up across the city.
“The presence of rats on the
surface is harmful to the quality of life of Parisians,” Boulard said.
Boulard
said he was raising his question after coming across an ongoing study, Project
Armageddon.
The project’s mission is
aiding the city in managing its rat population and among its objectives is
fighting prejudices against rats to help Parisians better live with them.
The
study is being financed by the French government, though the city of Paris is a
partner in the project.
Souyris
explained that what was being studied was to what extent humans and rats can
live together in a way that is “the most efficient and at the same time ensure
that it’s not unbearable for Parisians.”
While
rats can spread disease, the deputy mayor said that the rats being discussed
were not the same black rats that can carry plague, but other types of rats
that carry diseases like leptospirosis, a bacterial disease.
Souyris also highlighted some of the actions
taken by the city as part of its 2017 anti-rat plan, including investing in
thousands of new garbage cans to “make the rats go back underground.”
Souyris
later said on Twitter that Paris’ rats do not pose a “significant”
public health risk.
She added that she was asking
the French High Council on Public Health to weigh in on the debate.
“We
need scientific advice, not political press releases,” she said.
Animal
rights group Paris Animaux Zoopolis welcomed the city’s move.
“Rats
are present in Paris, as in all major French cities, so the question of
cohabitation necessarily arises,” a statement from the group said.
“At
PAZ, when we talk about “peaceful cohabitation” with rats, we don’t mean living
with them in our houses and apartments, but making sure that these animals
don’t suffer and that we’re not disturbed. Again, a very reasonable objective!”
CNN
has asked the Paris authorities for more detail on the plans.
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