The sky of London appears four unidentified flying objects

Derek Burden, an English construction worker who happened to capture a picture of London's sky with unidentified flying objects glowing

The photo was taken with a mobile phone in the early morning, capturing the London landscape with four strange light spots hovering above the Parliament Building.

Derek Burden, 40, said he took a picture from the 16th floor of Covent Garden in the heart of London's West End at 8:30 am. However, when it comes to showing off to his wife Sarah, the two realize the strange shadows in the cloudy sky.

Picture 1 of The sky of London appears four unidentified flying objects

A picture of 4 strange flying objects appeared in London's sky taken by Derek Burden.


'I was waiting for the construction materials to arrive and was going out to the balcony to have a cup of tea. At that moment I suddenly thought of taking some landscape photos for my wife to see, because she rarely visited London. At that time, I didn't notice anything at the time because I focused on taking photos , ' Burden said.

Burden said that those lights were not due to reflection, and confirmed that he took the picture without any light from the building behind him. After discovering the unusual thing in the photo, Burden gave a lot of photos to the people in the building and they were all amazed.

"I have no proof of what those disks are. I have never believed in the theory of aliens." Burden said, "But the universe is huge and I think this picture is trying to tell us that," Burden said.

In the UK, there are often strange phenomena involving unidentified flying UFOs. In January 2009, a 60-meter-high wind turbine was located in Conishiolme, north Lincolnshire, with a 18m-long rotor blade broken. Local people said that night there were strange halos emitting a shrill sound in the sky.

In October 2008, the British Ministry of Defense first published secret documents regarding unidentified flying UFOs. These documents are currently kept at the UK National Archives.