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First bugs, now rats? Timing of Philippine airport’s vermin outbreak sparks conspiracy theories

  • The timing of the outbreak led to speculation it could have been engineered in response to news of the airport’s privatisation, or an attempt to discredit the current government
  • Airport officials say the conspiracy theories are ‘far-fetched’, as analysts note the difficulty of fixing the airport’s innumerable problems

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A rat is captured on video running across Terminal 3 of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in the Philippines. Photo: Handout

When vermin suddenly started appearing in the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA), people smelled a rat.

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In late February, travellers in NAIA Terminal 2 complained they had been bitten by surot (bedbugs) that were teeming in its rattan benches. They posted photos of insect bites on their arms and legs, as well as images of the bugs.

In the first week of March, at least two separate videos posted by passengers in Terminal 3 showed a large rat scurrying openly across the floor between people’s legs. After that, a traveller posted photos of cockroaches emerging from chairs.

While NAIA has been beset by innumerable problems in the past, the vermin outbreak seemed to be unprecedented and its timing suspicious, as the sightings started shortly after the February 16 announcement that the government-run airport would be privatised under a consortium led by local beer brewing giant San Miguel Corporation (SMC), which won a 179 billion pesos (US$3.18 billion) contract to operate, maintain and upgrade NAIA for 15 to 25 years.

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The pest sightings and privatisation announcement combined to unleash a swarm of conspiracy theories, with many on social media postulating that the vermin outbreak may have been engineered.

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