Rats invade KFC-Taco Bell in NYC
www.chinaview.cn 2007-02-25 12:23:47

    BEIJING, Feb. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- About a dozen rats were filmed Friday racing around the floor of a locked KFC/Taco Bell restaurant in New York City, playing with each other and sniffing for food as they dashed around tables and children's high chairs.

    The restaurant was not open at the time, and the company later said construction in the basement on Thursday appeared to have stirred up the rats.

    Onlookers could not keep their eyes away from the jaw-dropping sight of urban vermin invading a restaurant. Video of the rats was seen around the world, disseminated on TV stations and the Internet. 

    The city Department of Health had inspectors at the site on Friday for hours, and by midday had posted a sign that read "CLOSED."

    Rats have long been a problem in New York City, with such a dense population and such a large and readily available food supply for the rodents.

    They are frequently seen scampering through subway tunnels, rooting through trash, dashing across parks and burrowing into the walls of apartment buildings.

    It's impossible to estimate how many rats there are in New York, experts say, but one popular belief is that there's one for each of the more than 8 million people in the city. Whatever the number, the rats have continued to thrive despite the city spending millions to eradicate them.

    The typical New York rat weighs about one pound and has a very flexible body, making it easy to squeeze though openings as small as a half inch. Each year, a female rat can easily bear dozens of offspring that survive, said Frank Gasperini, a pest-control expert.

    Jessica Leighton, the city's deputy commissioner of environmental health, said sloppy sanitation can attract rodents. "The basic message is, you need to remove food sources," she said. "In restaurants, rodents are a symptom of poor sanitation."

    Eisenberg, the exterminator, said wiping out vermin is impossible. His company kills about 50,000 rats and 250,000 a mice a year in the city, but it's a war that can't be won, only managed.  

(Agencies)

Editor: Lu Hui
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