-Caveat Lector-

Russian Scientist: Government Knows About UFO Bases

From: Stig Agermose <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2002 06:39:13 +0200
Fwd Date: Sat, 17 Aug 2002 06:32:35 -0400
Subject: Russian Scientist: Government Knows About UFO Bases


Source: Baku Sun - Azerbaijan

http://www.bakusun.az/cgi-bin/ayten/bakusun/show.cgi?code=2956

Stig

***

August 16 2002

Flying saucers Myth or fact?

Natiq Zeynalli

**

UFO bases in the Caspian? What's next, the Baku-Jupiter-Saturn
pipeline?

The Aug. 1-2 sighting of UFOs over Baku's oil company district,
Bayil, as reported by the opposition daily Musavat raised a few
eyebrows ? most of them sarcastically. Did it mean that so-
called flying saucers run on petrol as well at anti-matter?

According to Fuad Gasimov, academician and head of the
Seismological Department of the National Aerospace Agency the
often-sighted space craft have bases deep in the Caspian, one
off the north part of the Absheron Peninsula, the other in the
north sector of the Caspian Sea.

"I had been associated with the Institute of Earth Physics of
the Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R. during the Soviet era,"
Gasimov told the Baku Sun. "Since then we have information on
the existence UFO bases around Baku. But it was strongly kept as
a military secret."

Gasimov says that he worked with a Soviet organization that
charted UFOs. The organization sent an expedition to Baku and
the Absheron Peninsula, where they discovered UFOs bases around
the Nardaran and Pirshagi districts and around the Siyazan water
spring. The entrances to these bases, he says, are found deep
underground.

The Caspian region isn't the only home for UFOs, he says. The
Pacific and Atlantic oceans, in particular around Bermuda are
also home to alien bases.

Gasimov is not Baku's only ufologist. Other than the incidents
at Nardaran, flying saucers zoom in as the No. 2 topic of
conversation in the villages around Baku.

Vidadi Emrullaoglu, 85, a resident of Mardakan village, swears
he saw a UFO with his own eyes. He says that while drinking tea
on his balcony he observed a huge shining object going toward
the sea.

It wasn't the first time Emrullaoglu has spotted an alien
vessel, he says. In August last year, he and his neighbors were
terrified by three shining objects in the sky.

"I saw it with my own eyes," he says. "Again, they were like a
huge circles with terrifying lights around it. They seemed very
close to you, but the interesting thing is they would disappear
rapidly."

Of course, alien visits and UFO sightings have been a theme of
discussion among scientists long before the X-Files. Rovshan
Salmanzadeh, Ph.D is head of the department of solar-physics at
the Shamakha Observatory works in this sphere professionally.
However, he is quick to note that he refuses to believe in UFOs
until the day he's personally verified that what he saw was an
alien craft.

He told the Baku Sun that under the Soviets at the end of the
1980s, Azeri scientists produced theoretical studies, or
functioning principles, for types of flying objects such as
UFOs. Most requests came from the Ministry of Defense of the
Soviet Union. He notes that this was the period of the United
States' Strategic Defense Initiative, also known as the Star
Wars space defense plan.

While everyone knows now that all Star Wars did was make a lot
of U.S. defense contractors rich, back in the day, the U.S.S.R.
took it seriously and wanted its own scientists to come up with
a possible answer to SDI's space shield. Azeri scientists were
called on to develop a Soviet UFO.

After the collapse of U.S.S.R. Salmanzadeh says, all research
about the theoretical principles of flying objects prepared by
Azeri scientists were sent to Moscow, sometime in the early
1990s.

So can anyone here come up with credible evidence as to the
existence of alien craft? Salmanzadeh claims to have observed a
flying object that looked like a UFO in October 1999. He was on
his way back to Baku after an international conference at the
Shamakha Observatory. He and some colleagues took photos of the
craft, which they named Tusi-800. But in the end, they couldn't
clarify whether it was a genuine close encounter or simply a
plane flying a long distance away.

**

Programming by Ayten Alizadeh. Copyight by IntraNS. All rights
reserved.

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