logo
#

Latest news with #RhôneAlpes

Bees attack French town, leaving dozens injured
Bees attack French town, leaving dozens injured

Telegraph

time08-07-2025

  • Telegraph

Bees attack French town, leaving dozens injured

A swarm of bees attacked a French town on Sunday, leaving dozens of people injured and three in a critical condition in hospital. In an incident lasting around 30 minutes, 24 people were stung in the centre of Aurillac, in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, authorities said. A 78-year-old man suffered a cardiac arrest after being stung 25 times. He was later revived and is now in a stable condition. Emergency services, including police, medical teams and firefighters, rushed to the scene to treat the injured and cordon off the area. One mother said she was returning home with her three-year-old daughter when she heard shouting and panic. She was stung four times in the neck while trying to flee. 'There were a lot of bees, there were old people on the ground. It's the first time I've seen that,' she told French radio station RMC. An 80-year-old woman, who lives by the square where the attack happened, described the chaos. 'I saw two young women and a couple shaking each other. I saw a young woman in her bra and panties, she didn't know how to handle this problem,' she told France Info. 'I got the impression they were being assaulted by something but I didn't know what.' The bees reportedly appeared from a rooftop apiary on the terrace of the Grand Hôtel de Bordeaux, near Place du Square. Pierre Mathonier, the town's mayor, said: 'One theory seems to hold water… Asian hornets must have threatened the hive, which provoked the bees' aggression. These aggressive bees spread to Avenue de la République and attacked passers-by.' However, some experts cast doubt on that theory. Mickaël Henry, the director of the bees and environment research team, told the Libération newspaper: 'When faced with a hornet, bees generally tend to stop going out and protect the entrance of the hive.' Walid Loulidi, a master beekeeper at the Paris School of Beekeeping, gave another possible explanation. He said that breeding black bees with other species – a strategy used to increase honey production – could result in changes in behaviour over time. The rooftop apiary has been moved since the incident, and Mr Mathonier said he was considering banning them in the town. The Aurillac prosecutor's office said it was requesting the destruction of the 70,000 bees in the area.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store