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2010-04-06 04:25:30
A Jordanian mayor is considering suing a newspaper over an April Fools' Day
report saying aliens had landed nearby.
Al-Ghad's front-page story on 1 April said flying saucers flown by 3m (10ft)
creatures had landed in the desert town of Jafr, in eastern Jordan.
It said communication networks went down and frightened townspeople fled into
the streets.
The mayor, Mohammed Mleihan, said parents were so frightened they did not send
their children to school that day.
"Students didn't go to school, their parents were frightened and I almost
evacuated the town's 13,000 residents," Mr Mleihan told the Associated Press.
"People were scared that aliens would attack them."
He immediately notified the security authorities, who he said combed the area
looking for the aliens. They did not find any.
Big jokers
Al-Ghad's front page piece said the giant aliens had arrived on flying saucers
lighting up the Jordanian desert town of Jafr, some 300 kilometres (190 miles)
east of Amman.
Moussa Barhoumeh, Al Ghad's managing editor, said the newspaper was simply
having some good natured fun on April Fools' Day, and had apologised for any
inconvenience caused.
"We meant to entertain, not scare people," he said.
Mr Barhoumeh did not say why Jafr was chosen as the butt of the joke, but the
area is notorious for a nearby military base that sometimes hosts US troops for
joint training exercises.
Human rights groups claim the base once housed alleged al-Qaida militants, some
of whom were transferred from Guantanamo Bay, but Jordan has denied the charge.
While April Fools' Day jokes appearing in the press may be a great British
tradition, this is not the case in Jordan, says the BBC's Dale Gavlak in the
capital, Amman.
While Egyptians are renowned as the big jokers in the Arab world, able to
easily laugh at just about anything, the Jordanians are considered more
serious.
Although some are trying to change that perception by hosting a yearly
international comedy festival in Amman, for Jafr's mayor, this was clearly one
joke that just went too far, our correspondent adds.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/8604122.stm
Published: 2010/04/05 23:20:48 GMT