by Graham Tibbetts 14/May/2008
from Telegraph Website
The most comprehensive Government files on UFO activity are
opened to the public for the first time today and they disclose that
even air traffic controllers and police officers have seen
mysterious craft in the skies over Britain.
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The sightings range from incredible tales of little green
men visiting the Wirral to corroborated accounts from policemen and
pilots of Unidentified Flying Objects hovering above towns and
cities.
All are recorded on official forms, held by air bases and
police stations, and compiled by the Ministry of Defense between 1978 and
2002.
Disclosed for the first time is a report from 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. In the control tower a senior air traffic controller
(Satco) was supervising his deputy and an assistant.
According to the report, the deputy 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, according to the files.
It was described as a,
"brilliant solid ball of light, bright silvery in color". The
file noted that "witnesses do not wish to be identified in case their
professional integrity is questioned".
Others in the aviation industry also encountered unidentified
flying objects, including a Sea King helicopter crew who tracked two
objects on their radar for 40 miles, travelling at almost
one nautical mile per second, in September 1985.
Four months later
two constables in Woking police station, Surrey, saw a white light with a
tail above the town centre which then "descended into the Horshall area".
They reported it to their inspector, who recorded it as a "genuine
report" but noted that the officers were slightly embarrassed because
Horshall Common features in the works of the science fiction writer HG
Wells.
They were not alone. In June 1984, three officers at
Edgware station in north London had been called to a garden after a
sighting in Stanmore.
On their arrival the uniformed officers
found a "flashing light 45 degrees up in the sky" with a "dome on top and
underneath" which they watched through binoculars.
"We observed the object for one hour. During this period of time
the object moved erratically from side to side, up and down and to and
fro, not venturing far from its original position," wrote the officers,
who also sketched a cartoon-like image of the spacecraft.
But
a couple in the Wirral claimed to have had an encounter of an altogether
closer kind. The husband reported visiting bases in Cheshire of green
aliens, including one called Elgar who was killed by another race in 1984.
His wife saw their craft crash over Wallasey Town Hall but the official
response was recorded as a terse "no reply".
The documents are
contained in eight files that have been 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.
Nick Pope, who worked for the MoD 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."
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