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PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS

Race is on to make Paris Olympics mosquito-free

France is scrambling to make sure that virus-carrying tiger mosquitos, a growing menace in Europe, don't spoil the Paris Olympics for athletes and fans, with millions of visitors due in the French capital for the summer Games.

A tiger mosquito bites a person
A tiger mosquito bites a person. France is working to make sure that this type of mosquito, a growing menace in Europe, doesn't spoil the Olympic Games for athletes and fans in Paris this summer. (Photo by Valery HACHE / AFP)

The Asian tiger mosquito has made its home in much of northern Europe, including France, over the past two decades, spreading diseases such as dengue, chikungunya and zika.

Climate change is said to be behind its easy adaptation to colder climes, with authorities recently declaring Normandy in the northwest, the last
remaining mosquito-free region in all of France, infested just like the rest of the country.

Authorities have tried in vain to get rid of the insects, including by fumigating parts of Paris, a technique regularly used in tropical cities.

But with the start of the Paris Games only four months away, they are on the clock, with experts warning that a tiger mosquito bite could destroy an athlete’s chance of making it to the starting line.

READ ALSO: PODCAST: Why is France so negative about the Olympics, a new schools row and the secret Michelin inspectors

“When you are sick with dengue, you won’t be jumping over any hurdles,” said Didier Fontenille, an entomologist and expert on vector-borne diseases.

“The host cities and especially the Olympic Village must be kept mosquito-free,” he said.

‘Citizens’ mobilisation’

Health authorities have promised “increased surveillance” of the mosquito threat, which has been notoriously difficult to eliminate.

France reported 45 dengue cases last year, attributed to local virus transmission.

Tiger mosquitoes are happiest in cities, where an abundant presence of stagnant water creates ideal conditions for laying their eggs.

Fontenille said dealing with stagnant water would “take care of 80 percent of the problem” if there was a “citizens’ mobilisation” to clean up even the smallest amounts of water left in flower bowls or saucers.

For the rest, he said, repellents, mosquito nets and organic insecticides used on mosquito larvae could be effective.

Mosquito traps also show promise, using simulated human body odours to attract, and then kill, the mosquitoes.

READ MORE: Hotels, tickets and scams: What to know about visiting Paris for the 2024 Olympics

A variation consists of fooling the insects into laying their eggs in the trap, where they are destroyed.

Biogents, a specialist firm, said it won a public bid to protect the Marseille Marina, site of sailing competitions, with its plan to install 15 traps.

Co-manager Hugo Plan said they would be set up next month, spread over one hectare “in greenery and in shaded, humid areas”.

During the Games, staff will regularly check the metal boxes that are 80 centimetres (31.5 inches) high, he said.

The fight against tiger mosquitoes is a flourishing business, with Qista, another French specialist firm, saying it had put up 13,000 anti-insect
installations in 26 countries over the past decade.

Researchers are meanwhile working on DNA modification and sterilisation to diminish the mosquito population.

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PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS

Paris Olympics ticket app and resale platform goes live

The official 2024 Paris Olympics app went live on Wednesday, enabling ticket holders to obtain their places and resell seats for any unwanted sessions, the organising committee announced.

Paris Olympics ticket app and resale platform goes live

The app “paris2024tickets” is the “only official and authorised resale channel: the resale is completely transparent for both the seller and the purchaser,” the organising committee said in a statement.

Most events for the July 26th-August 11th Olympic Games have quickly sold out during multiple ticket releases since last year, with around 8.27 million places purchased in total.

There remain tickets for the Olympic football, however, while most sports are still available for the Paralympics which take place from August 28th-September 8th.

The app will be “the essential tool for accessing your tickets for the Olympic Games Paris 2024. On competition day, only a ticket presented on the Paris 2024 tickets app will allow access to the venues,” the organising committee said.

It enables buyers to transfer tickets to their fellow travellers and will be used to obtain the QR codes that must be shown to security at venues.

The QR codes “are not visible for the moment to prevent counterfeiting,” Michael Aloisio, director general of the Paris organising committee, told reporters.

Also now live in the website to request QR codes to enter security zones in Paris during the Games – you find out HERE whether you will need a code and how to apply for one.

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