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UFO's in
London
LONDON —
British
officials
on
Thursday
released
about
8,500
pages of
previously
classified
reports
that
document
sightings
of
unidentified
flying
objects
by the
military
and
members
of the
public
dating
back to
the
1950s.
The 35
large
files,
available
via the
Internet,
mainly
cover
the
period
from
1997 to
2005 and
include
photographs,
drawings
and
descriptions
of
flying
saucer
sightings,
as well
as
letters
that the
Ministry
of
Defense
sent
eyewitnesses
in
response
to their
accounts.
Policemen,
a
soldier,
a Royal
Air
Force
officer
and
members
of the
public
report
sightings
of
objects
including
a "chewy
mint
shaped
solid
craft"
and
aerial
objects
resembling
a
"ring,"
a
"jellyfish"
and a
"silver
voile
spin
top."
In one
account
a man
said he
believed
he had
been
"abducted"
by
aliens
in
October
1998
after
seeing
an
unidentified
craft
hover
over his
London
home and
finding
that he
had
gained
an hour
of time
in the
process.
"It was
a large
cigar-shaped
vehicle
with big
projectiles
on each
side
like
wings,"
he told
the
ministry.
"It
seemed
to have
two very
bright
lights
at the
front
and a
white
light
flashing
round
and
round
underneath.
... As
you can
imagine,
I felt
quite
shaken."
The
Ministry
of
Defense
wrote to
the man
informing
him that
the
object
was
probably
an
airship,
adding
that the
time he
had
gained
was
probably
the
result
of the
clocks
being
put back
one hour
on the
night of
his
close
encounter.
Another
file
released
by the
National
Archives
reveals
how the
Royal
Air
Force
was
inundated
with
calls
one
morning
in 1967
after
residents
of
southern
England
awoke to
find six
small
beeping
UFOs
lying in
a
perfect
line
from the
Isle of
Sheppey
to the
Bristol
Channel.
A bomb
disposal
unit
blew up
one of
the
UFOs,
another
was
airlifted
to the
southeastern
village
of
Aldermaston,
and both
the army
and the
defense
ministry's
intelligence
unit
were
mobilized
for what
was
considered
a real
"alien
invasion."
It was
later
discovered
that
engineering
students
at
Farnborough
Technical
College
had
constructed
and
positioned
the UFOs
in a bid
to raise
money
for
charity.
"It does
raise
some
questions
about
what
really
would
happen
if at
any time
in the
future
there
was some
kind of
incident
— would
we be
prepared?"
said
David
Clarke,
author
of "The
UFO
Files"
and
consultant
to the
National
Archives'
UFO
project.
One of
the
files
documents
the
experiences
of a
retired
RAF
officer
who said
he saw a
UFO
while on
holiday
in Sri
Lanka in
April
2004 and
sent the
Ministry
of
Defense
supporting
photographs.
"I
noticed
a
partial
aura in
the sky,
a minute
or so
later
there
was a
clap of
thunder,
then a
short
while
later a
ring
like a
doughnut
appeared,"
he told
the
ministry,
adding
that he
thought
it was
an "air
burst."
In its
reply,
the
ministry
suggested
that the
officer
contact
the Sri
Lankan
government.
Other
highlights
include
a UFO
policy
file
from
1997
that
reveals
how the
Ministry
of
Defense
handled
UFO
reports,
and a
file
detailing
the only
full
debate
about
UFOs
ever to
be held
in
Britain's
House of
Lords —
in
January
1979.
The MoD
said it
investigated
every
UFO
sighting
report
it
received
to
determine
"whether
there is
any
evidence
that the
United
Kingdom's
airspace
might
have
been
compromised
by
hostile
or
unauthorized
air
activity." |