Flying saucers appear in many records in the UK

The number of unidentified flying objects (UFOs), also known as flying saucers, appeared in 2009 is expected to record the most ever in the UK, after the first half of the year recorded hundreds of cases.

In the past 6 months, there have been 231 UFO detection cases reported to the Ministry of Defense. This figure surpassed the statistics for the previous year such as 2008 (285 cases), 2007 (135) and 2006 (97 cases). The number of sightings of the flying saucers is explained by the fact that more and more people have cameras in their hands and can record UFOs instantly and easily when caught.

Nick Pope, who has run a UK government UFO project and is considered a leading expert on flying saucers, said: " We are looking forward to a record year. I think the number of UFOs was recorded last year. It is already high but now this number is even higher ".

Picture 1 of Flying saucers appear in many records in the UK

Artwork a mysterious flying saucer.(Photo: Daily Mail)

Last year, the Ministry of Defense also published detailed documents about the sightings of strange objects in the foggy sky between 1986 and 1992. Among these were an Alitalia aircraft ( Italy) when they landed at London Heathrow Airport announced they almost collided with a UFO. The pilot describing this strange flying object " is like a light brown or golden brown rocket, about 3 meters long but has no smoke flames ".

The document explaining UFOs released by the British National Archives revealed that the military acknowledged that the Alitalia case looked at the unknown flying object in April 1991. They also ruled out the possibility that this was a British or American rocket and concluded that it was a UFO because there was no evidence to prove it.

Picture 2 of Flying saucers appear in many records in the UK

A new unidentified flying object is recorded in the UK:
(Photo: Telegraph)

Two other famous UFO collisions were reported as the summer of 1991, when an airplane was heading towards London's Gatwick Airport, it was reported that " a wingless automatic launcher " was missed. to the left of the plane. In another case, the plane is leaving Gatwick airport when it detects " a rhombus " rushing across the cockpit.

The British flying disc declassification document also published details of an American fighter pilot, who claimed to have ordered a UFO to be flying across southern England in 1957 and then received orders be half-worded about this mysterious event.