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Broadcasting False Alarm Triggers Korean Joy Followed by Anger

South Korea team sing the national anthem near their flag at their World Cup semi-final match against Germany in Seoul June 25, 2002.

SEOUL, June 27 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - World Cup chaos broke out Thursday, June 27, in South Korea after a major radio station broadcast that Germany had been disqualified from the World Cup final against Brazil, and that South Korea would play instead.

Shoppers in department stores cheered and World Cup organizers were flooded with phone calls after TV actress Choi Hwa-Jung wrongly announced that Germany had been disqualified after a player failed a drug test. But the raptures soon turned to anger, Agence France-Presse (AFP) said.

SBS Power FM, one of South Korea’s most popular radio stations, made several apologies and the Korean World Cup Organizing Committee (KOWOC) had to release an official statement saying it was not true.

Germany beat South Korea 1-0 in the semi-final on Tuesday, June 25, ending the co-host’s dream run in the World Cup which had sparked nationwide football fever.

Choi received a mobile phone text message from her assistant who had been told by a friend that Germany had been disqualified from Sunday’s final in Yokohama, the embarrassed radio station said.

But there was panic in the studio when she immediately announced the “good news” on air on her daily talk show.

SBS officials said production operators frantically gestured to Choi to keep quiet but failed.

“After receiving the message from her assistant, she became too excited and read it into the microphone,” an SBS spokesman said.

“There was a pandemonium in the main control room. About four minutes later, the message was confirmed to be false and she apologized four times for airing the wrong message without checking,” he told AFP.

Yonhap news agency said hundreds of shoppers in a department store in Busan went into raptures after hearing the broadcast.

News media, the World Cup organizing committee and government ministries were all flooded with phone calls to find out if the news was right. Leading internet sites reported the announcement as if it were an authentic news report, AFP reported.

KOWOC put out a statement saying that all the German players tested for drugs after the semi-final were negative as it sought to calm the new fever.

And as the blunder sank in, angry listeners inundated the SBS switchboard and its Internet site with protest calls and messages.

“We feel sorry for causing the public uproar by airing a groundless rumor,” SBS chief producer Kim Sang-Il said.

“There is a high possibility of the producers in charge being punished for the incident,” he said.

Wild rumors about the World Cup have been rampant on South Korean internet sites.

One false news story posted on one site said a foreign news agency had “confirmed” that Korea had bribed their way through to the semi-finals.

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