The most famous "April Fools" dumps throughout history....Has caused deaths and mass panic ..
The month of April was famous for its fun, with April Fool's Day in the UK beginning at least since the 19th century.
Although the origin of this day is unknown, the most likely explanation is that it began after the sixteenth century when Pope Gregory XIII decided to adopt the Gregorian calendar, meaning that New Year's Day would change from 1 April to 1 January. People who have been celebrating the old calendar celebrate sarcastic comments because they believe the April Fool's Day.
The first of April is the day when it is permissible to lie to all the peoples of the world except the Spanish and German peoples. The reason is that this day is sacred in Spain and in Germany it coincides with the birthday of Bismarck, the well-known German leader.
One of the most famous landfills that turned the world upside down, according to "Vito", when the BBC broadcast in 1957 the news of the spaghetti trees in Switzerland, which enjoyed abundant harvest due to the weather and the extinction of "Spaghetti Sousse", and the British flooded the radio with calls to ask where to buy and plant the tree .
1. In 2001, Radio DJ Brighton announced to its listeners that a replica of the Titanic could be seen on the coast of Peche Head, the highest cliffs in Britain. Hundreds of people rushed to the place to discover it was just a joke. Because of the huge number, police have urged people to leave before a tragedy occurs.
2. In 1896, an American man from Tennessee decided to carry out a scary plot in his wife after a few months' marriage. He wore a white mask and the door of the house. He then asked her to cook dinner for him, but the lady lost consciousness and died within one hour.
3. In 2002, Kansas radio announcers caused panic among listeners when they reported that local tap water contained high levels of hydrogen peroxide, which would lead to frequent urination and the appearance of wrinkles. But listeners did not realize that hydrogen peroxide was the chemical name of the water, and the police received hundreds of calls from the frightened population.
4. But in 1897, a joke came out of control in Georgia when American high school students decided to flee and enjoy their time, but did not expect the school principal to write quick letters to all parents demanding that students be removed from school to ensure their reputation.
5. In 2010, Jordan's Al-Ghad newspaper panicked citizens when it announced on its front page the landing of a foreign body and space creatures near the desert city of Jaffer, where residents were very afraid of sending their children to school, while officials began evacuating the area.
6. In the 1980s, the situation in the Middle East was not laughable, yet an Israeli intelligence analyst in 1986 set up a false report on April that said Nabih Berri, then leader of the Amal movement, had been wounded in an assassination attempt. The story spread through Israeli radio before it turned out to be a lie.
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