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London mayor in fox control plea after Hackney attack

BBC Published Jun 8, 2010 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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London Mayor Boris Johnson stated that "boroughs should focus on their duties for pest control".
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London Mayor Boris Johnson said councils need to "get together" and look at how they tackled pests.
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London Mayor Boris Johnson stated: "It's right that boroughs should focus on their duties for pest control because as romantic and cuddly as a fox is, it is also a pest."
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Two nine-month-old twin girls, Lola and Isabella Koupparis, were mauled by a fox while sleeping in cots in an upstairs bedroom in Hackney on Saturday night.
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Lola was bitten in the face and arm; Isabella suffered injuries to her arms during the fox attack.
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The twins remained in hospital in a serious but stable condition following the attack.
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On Monday evening, Isabella was transferred from the Royal London Hospital to Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) for further treatment.
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A GOSH NHS Trust spokeswoman said Isabella "continues to receive the highest possible levels of care from medical staff".
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Lola remains in the Royal London Hospital in a serious but stable condition.
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The twins' four-year-old brother, who was also sleeping upstairs, was not hurt.
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After the attack, pest controllers set fox traps in the back garden, and one fox found in one of the devices on Monday night was humanely destroyed by a vet.
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The fox is thought to have entered through a ground-floor door left open due to hot weather.
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The London mayor has called on councils to "focus" on pest control after a fox is believed to have attacked twin nine-month-old girls in their home.

Lola and Isabella Koupparis were mauled on Saturday night as they slept in cots in an upstairs bedroom in Hackney.

In the attack, described as a "living nightmare" by their mother, Lola was bitten in the face and arm while Isabella suffered injuries to her arms.

Mr Johnson said "boroughs should focus on their duties for pest control".

The mayor said the councils need to "get together" and look at how they tackled pests.

"It's right that boroughs should focus on their duties for pest control because as romantic and cuddly as a fox is, it is also a pest," he said.

The twins remain in hospital in a serious but stable condition.

On Monday evening Isabella was transferred from the Royal London Hospital to Great Ormond Street Hospital (GOSH) for further treatment.

A GOSH NHS Trust spokeswoman said Isabella "continues to receive the highest possible levels of care from medical staff".

Lola remains in the Royal London Hospital in a serious but stable condition.

Their mother Pauline, told BBC London 94.9 that she and her husband Nick were watching television when she heard her "a funny cry" and went to check on the girls.

She described the "living nightmare" when she switched on the lights to see the girls covered in blood and the fox still there.

The twins' four-year-old brother who was also sleeping upstairs, was not hurt.

The fox is thought to have crept in through a door on the ground floor which had been left open because of the hot weather.

After the attack, pest controllers set fox traps in the back garden and one found in one of the devices on Monday night was humanely destroyed by a vet.

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