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Even emergency medical staff suffered abominable lodgings at the Fyre Festival — enduring bugs and bloodstained mattresses, according to a new lawsuit.

The less-than-five-star accommodations greeted medics contracted to work the event, says the suit against Ja Rule and other organizers of the Bahamas debacle.

Pennsylvania-based National Event Services claims in court papers that when its personnel arrived at Great Exuma Island a few days before the April 28 festival start, its staffers “immediately discovered that the accommodations were uninhabitable, including bug infestations, blood-stained mattresses and no air conditioning.”

NES stuck around anyway, setting up a medical tent “in response to obvious safety and health concerns for the people trapped on the island, which left NES exposed to serving distressed patrons for an unprepared festival site,” claims the lawsuit, filed in federal court in Philadelphia.

The Fyre folks didn’t even have a medical-evacuation plane or helicopter on hand, and the health clinic on the island was closed, the suit alleges.

NES is seeking unspecified punitive and compensatory damages from the organizers, according to the suit, reported Friday in Philadelphia magazine.

In another new suit, filed in federal court in Florida, two festival guests are seeking $5 million in damages.