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Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Can an April Fool's day story trigger a European Commission investigation?

Nothing escapes the European Commission's severe oversight. Not even April Fool's day stories. It emerged over the weekend that the Commission's Directorate General for Competition had sent the Belgian government a request for information about, among other things, plans to build a second runway at Charleroi airport.

Fairly standard procedure, except for one small detail. The plans for the new runway had been 'revealed' by Belgian news site PagTour in its April Fool's day story this year. The funniest aspect is that, after a plausible start, the original article went on to offer a number of rather weird details, hinting at its true nature, such as:
  • A secret 'Committee for Airports' of the Wallonia Region, whose members only drink water from the Belgian city of Spa;
  • Jean-Jacques Cloquet, the CEO of Charleroi airport, being spotted during a meeting with "one of the major experts of Belgian aviation" in a "restaurant specialised in all kinds of fish [remember that in French an April Fool's day prank is called poisson d'avril, literally April's fish]";
  • The plan for the new runway being hidden in a secret strongbox by Edmée De Groeve, the former President of the airport. 
But apparently none of these were wacky enough to stop the European Commission requesting information about the 'planned' new runway to the Belgian government, in a letter to which the PagTour article was attached as a reference.

Equally extraordinarily, before being passed on to Charleroi airport, the Commission's letter (which Belgian daily L'Echo has published here) had reportedly gone through the Belgian central government and the Walloon regional government. Both failed to realise that the request for information on the second runway was based on an April Fool's day story.

We can't help but wonder what the Commission's next investigation will be. Perhaps they could examine the Royal Mail's use of owls (as reported by the Daily Mail on 1 April 2013). Surely some violation of animal welfare laws there...

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

There was one a few years ago about ferrets being used to run cables through conduit - fooled me - it seemed an entirely sensible use to which to put the little beasts!

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/7541455/Ferrets-key-to-bridging-the-digital-divide-between-cities-and-rural-areas.html

Anonymous said...

The EU also banned hedgehog flavour crisps and straight bananas. These were not April Fool's Day pranks.

Some of these EU officials and their Directives belong in Billy Smart's Circus.

SC

Rollo said...

well at least they are not wasting all the money we send them. Most of the expenditure is far more damaging than this.

Anonymous said...

Is there a shortage of clowns in Billy smarts Circus then ?

Anonymous said...

There may be a shortage of clowns in Billy Smart's circus but there is definately an over-supply of clowns within the EU and ECHR.

SC

Anonymous said...

The EUSSR exists to steal and exert mindless control over 500 million people... and, machine-like, it will ALWAYS act accordingly, irrespective of the legitimacy of the claim to control.