Morgan Stanley
India | Monday, 8 September 2008
Comments & Features
All IBTimes
Comments & Features
Latest News

We are not alone: UK's secret files disclose UFO sightings

By Akshay Baluni
Font Scale:
Posted 14 May 2008 @ 02:13 pm GMT

If the secret files released by UK's Ministry of Defense are to be believed, aliens from outer space have been visiting Britain for years and UFO (Unidentified Flying Objects) sightings even doubled after the film Close Encounters was released in 1977.

A drawing done by one of the members of public who admits that they had contact with UFOs
If the secret files released by UK's Ministry of Defense are to be believed, aliens from outer space have been visiting Britain for years and UFO (Unidentified Flying Objects) sightings even doubled after the film Close Encounters was released in 197...

The archives are the first batch of a four-year release program of all the ministry's UFO files. The documents, which can be downloaded from the National Archives website (at www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ufos), cover the period from 1978 to 1987. These are one of the most comprehensive Government files on UFO activity ever opened to the public and are contained in eight files released under the Freedom of Information Act. Over the next four years more than 150 files will be made available at the National Archive in Kew, south-west London, the ministry has stated.

According to the secret files collating reports by members of the public as well, the alien craft come in all shapes, sizes and colors but their occupants are uniformly green.

The files include accounts of strange lights in the sky and unexplained objects being spotted. They disclose that even air traffic controllers and police officers have seen mysterious craft in the skies over Britain. The sightings range from incredible tales of little green men visiting the Wirral to corroborated accounts from policemen and pilots of UFOs hovering above towns and cities.

All are recorded on official forms, held by air bases and police stations, and have been compiled by the Ministry of Defense spanning 1978 to 2002. The files affirm that "witnesses do not wish to be identified in case their professional integrity is questioned."

The reports are primarily corroborated by three experienced air traffic controllers who attempted to "talk in" a UFO which landed on the runway before them. The incident occurred on April 19, 1984, at an East Anglian airfield which was operating two runways called 22 and 27.

A senior air traffic controller (Satco) with his deputy and an assistant in the control tower was in contact with a light aircraft preparing to land on runway 22 when the Satco noticed lights approaching the other runway. The unidentified object came in at speed, made a touch and go on runway 27 then departed at terrific speed in a near vertical climb, the files mention.

It was described as a "brilliant solid ball of light, bright silvery in color."

The incident is one of the more credible in the newly public files because it was reported by air traffic controllers, said David Clarke, a UFO expert who has worked with the National Archives on the document release.

"They were absolutely astonished," he said. "It was a bright, circular object, flashing different colors, and after it touched down it disappeared at fantastic speed. The report comes from very qualified people, and it's one of the few that remained unexplained."

Another report from 1983 from a 78-year-old man out fishing at midnight falls under the 'bizarre' category. It tells of the writer following aliens in green overalls on to a spaceship and then being told to go away because he was too old and weak for their purposes.

Then a 1985 typewritten letter to the ministry tells of an alien spaceship being shot down in the river Mersey in northern England by another spacecraft and the writer befriending an alien called Algar. Just as Algar was about to reveal himself to the government he was killed by another alien. He was still in telepathic contact with an alien called Malcben from the planet Platone in the Milky Way, the author added.

The ministry currently houses files on 11,000 sightings dating back to the 1950s. All the sightings were checked out in case they were Soviet aircraft probing Britain's defenses during the Cold War.

"Clearly some reports remain unexplained but we have found no evidence that these phenomena represent a threat to national security and therefore cannot justify devoting Defence resources to their investigation," an official letter from 1985 reads.

Nick Pope, who worked for the Ministry of Defense for 21 years and was responsible for investigating the sightings said, "Most of the UFO sightings here are probably misidentifications of aircraft lights and meteors, but some are more difficult to explain."

The ministry dismisses 90 percent of the reports as having mundane explanations and leave 10 percent with a question mark and the assurance they are of no threat.

Dr Clarke, who is a lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University, said that conspiracy theories about aliens are "very difficult to disprove."

He said, "I doubt the disclosure of these files will convince those who believe there is an official cover-up. Inevitably, some have already dismissed this release as a whitewash. For them the 'truth' still remains out there, hidden no doubt in more above top secret files hidden somewhere else."

IBTimes RSS
E-Newsletters : Enter your Email for Fast News & Opinions
advertisement
Top Stories on Comments & Features
advertisement