Britain's UFO secrets revealed

Scientist's pressure for information opens up hidden government files on
strange sightings in the sky government files
Freedom of information: special report

Antony Barnett, Public Affairs Editor
Sunday June 4, 2000

On 15 February 1999 an air traffic controller in Scotland noticed something
strange on his radar screen. A bright blip on his screen suggested there was
a very large object travelling at 3,000mph over the Scottish coastline
heading south-west to Belfast.
The size of the blip suggested the object was 10 miles long and two miles
wide. Two minutes later the object disappeared from the radar screen.

Three months earlier, MoD documents record that a commercial pilot flying
over the Midlands reported an unusual object travelling at 'very high speed'
with a very bright strobe light flashing once every 20 seconds.

Although the two incidents were unrelated, both were reported to a
little-known department in the Ministry of Defence, known as Secretariat (Air
Staff) 2a. This is the secretive section in Whitehall which collates reports
of unidentified flying objects that cross British airspace.

Whitehall has traditionally treated reports of UFO sightings as highly
classified and only released information to the public after 30 years. But
the parliamentary Ombudsman insisted that the MoD hand this information to
Colin Ridyard, a research chemist from Wales.

Dr Ridyard had been seeking information relating to UFO sightings by pilots
or radar operators between July 1998 and July 1999. Initially the MoD refused
on the ground it would be too expensive. But after the intervention of the
ombudsman, Michael Buckley, the MoD agreed to release the information as a
one-off exercise for �75. The Ministry handed two reports to Ridyard, yet
official information from the Civil Aviation Authority suggests there had
been additional sightings. During the same period the CAA said it reported
two more UFO sightings to the MoD, neither of which the Ministry disclosed.

According to official CAA reports, in the same month that a radar picked up
an enormous object flying across Scotland, a pilot flying over the North Sea
became startled when his aircraft became illuminated by an 'incandescent'
light. Three other aircraft in the area reported seeing a ball of light
moving at high speed. Air traffic controllers reported there were no strange
aircraft in the area, but five minutes later an operator at a weather station
picked up a fast-moving object on his radar.

The other incident which CAA reported to the MoD occurred in June 1999 when
the pilot of a B757 flying over the North Sea reported an unidentified
military-looking aircraft passing close by in the opposite direction. Nothing
was seen on the plane's radar or by air traffic controllers. The MoD told the
Authority that there were no military aircraft known to be in that area at
the time.

Although an MoD spokeswoman would not discuss individual sightings, she said
all these events had perfectly normal explanations. 'Some-times radars have
spurious readings caused by military aircraft in the vicinity, and
radar-jamming facilities and bright lights on the underside of aircraft can
be caused by events on the ground.'

In a letter to one of Ridyard's local MPs, Defence Minister John Spellar
said: 'My department has no interest or role with respect to UFO/flying
saucer matters or to the question of the existence or otherwise of
extraterrestrial life forms - about which we remain open-minded.'

However, declassified gov ernment documents in the Public Records Office from
June 1965 reveal that 'it was official MoD policy to play down the subject of
unidentified flying objects and to avoid attaching undue public attention or
publicity to the subject... as a result we have never had any political
pressure to mount a large-scale investigation'. Other documents from that
time state: 'The press are never to be given information about unusual radar
sightings_ and [unusual visual] sightings are in no circumstances to be
disclosed to the press.'

But Ridyard said: 'This is not about little green men, but about freedom of
information. It is clear there are many strange incidents that happen in the
British skies that are kept secret. There may be issues of aircraft safety or
natural phenomena, but by keeping this information secret these incidents
cannot be scrutinised by the public or the scientific community.'

One of the most infamous incidents relating to a UFO sighting in Britain only
came to light through US freedom of information legislation. This revealed
that in December 1980 three security patrolmen investigating a potential air
crash near the US Air Force base in Suffolk saw a strange glowing triangular
object hovering in the forest near the base which had a 'pulsing red light on
top and blue lights underneath'.

An official report by Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Halt , the deputy base
commander, included a description of the events and stated that the next day
three depressions were found in the forest where the object was discovered
which showed radiation readings. Later that night three star-like objects
were seen in the sky moving 'rapidly in sharp angular movements'.

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