According to CNN Portugal, the number of reports of rats,
cockroaches and bugs on the streets of Lisbon are increasing. This is at a time when the capital city
council spent two months, between June and August, without a contract in place
for prevention actions against pests.
The news site adds that a group of citizens have now come
together in the city to clean some neighbourhoods themselves from the beginning
of September, with residents claiming that they have “never seen the city so
dirty”.
CML councillor Ângelo Pereira, admitted to CNN Portugal that
there had been months when there was no company contracted for pest prevention.
But he guarantees that the preventive actions that were planned were still
carried out by the “Integrated Pest Control Service (SCIP), under the Urban
Cleaning Division”, with “CML also contracting an external service to support
and carry out prevention operations”.
According to the CML, that municipal service “has responded
directly to 1,836 requests since June 9, when the contract with the European Disinfection
Company ended” – a company that has carried out this work for the last 36
months.
Where are pests the
biggest problem?
The more than 1,800 requests, adds the CML, include
responses to requests from citizens to combat infestations of rats and
cockroaches, as well as planned preventive actions.
The areas with the most requests for help with pest prevention
were: Marvila, Lumiar, Belém, Campo de Ourique and Olivais. The latter was, in
fact, the parish with the most problems with rats and mice, followed by
Alvalade and Areeiro.
The data also reveals that the parish of Parque das Nações
was the one that registered the fewest requests for problems with rats (3) and
that Santo António made the fewest requests regarding cockroaches (15).
A friend from Australia visited us in Lisbon in August. She was disgusted by the dirt and rubbish on the streets. We were embarrassed by the situation. There is so much marketing and tourism hype but for her the reality was a disappointment - a dirty, badly maintained city
By Jo Walker from Lisbon on 27 Aug 2022, 17:00
Unfortunately, Lisbon's mayor Carlos Moedas is more concerned with cutting ribbons, attending cerimonies and receiving irrelevant dignitaries (see his Facebook page of smiley photos) than doing anything about the practical problems of the city. It has degraded significantly since he took over
By Richard Eliot from Lisbon on 28 Aug 2022, 17:55