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NewsJune 9, 2002

BEIJING -- It was a great story: U.S. Congress wants new building, threatens to leave Washington. So one of Beijing's biggest tabloids published as news the fictional account from the Web site of the American satire newspaper The Onion -- and got an embarrassing lesson in journalism...

The Associated Press

BEIJING -- It was a great story: U.S. Congress wants new building, threatens to leave Washington.

So one of Beijing's biggest tabloids published as news the fictional account from the Web site of the American satire newspaper The Onion -- and got an embarrassing lesson in journalism.

The June 3 report by the Beijing Evening News quoted Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert calling the domed, 209-year-old U.S. Capitol "inappropriate for a world-class legislature." Others said Congress might move to Tennessee or North Carolina if it didn't get a new building.

The article was a deadpan spoof of the way sports teams threaten to leave cities in order to get new stadiums. The report in the Evening News, which didn't credit The Onion, included a graphic from the Web site showing a proposed new U.S. Capitol equipped with a retractable dome.

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The Evening News acknowledged its mistake when contacted by foreign reporters, though it hasn't told its readers.

"We consider this a warning and will strengthen supervision of our reports," said Yu Bing, a manager of the paper's foreign news department.

Yu said his newspaper looks at "whether a report is hostile to the nation concerned or would hurt relations with that country.

"This report didn't contain such elements, so we decided to publish it," he said.

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