The Citizen (KZN)

Bedbug panic in France: it’s the Kremlin

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Paris – The panic that gripped France in autumn 2023 over the alleged spread of bedbugs was amplified by disinforma­tion on social media accounts linked to the Russian state, a French minister said yesterday.

The comments by Europe Minister Jean-Noel Barrot followed growing warnings from France about the dangers of Russian disinforma­tion particular­ly aimed at underminin­g support for Ukraine as it fights the invasion.

“The issue of bedbugs was artificial­ly amplified on social networks by accounts that have been establishe­d to be of Russian inspiratio­n or origin,” he said. “It was very largely amplified by accounts linked to the Kremlin.”

Media had reported that French intelligen­ce services concluded there was a link between Russia and the bedbug panic, but this is the first time a French minister has confirmed it in public.

Barrot said the social media accounts had even created a “false link between the arrival of Ukrainian refugees and the spread of the bedbugs”.

In October, France shut several schools over what was thought to be an infestatio­n of bedbugs as the government held a series of emergency meetings.

The blood-sucking insects were reportedly spotted in the Paris metro, high-speed TGV trains and at Paris’s Charles De Gaulle Airport.

Authoritie­s became increasing­ly concerned over what they considered an unfounded panic ahead of the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Barrot pointed to other such campaigns such as the daubing of anti-Semitic graffiti in Paris and other cities and a fake news report that President Emmanuel Macron had postponed a trip to Ukraine for security reasons.

Macron in 2021 created a new agency called Viginum to detect digital disinforma­tion campaigns. Viginum said last month it had identified a network dubbed “Portal Kombat” of dozens of Russian-origin websites aimed at destabilis­ing public opinion in France and Europe.

Officials are concerned about a rise in disinforma­tion campaigns ahead of June European elections where the far right – more sympatheti­c towards Russia – are eyeing big gains. –

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