One of the first encounters
between a civilian aircraft and a UFO happened at 2.45am on 24th July 1948. Captain
Clarence S. Chiles and Pilot John B. Whitted, both former US Air Force pilots, were
flying an Eastern Airlines DC-3 flight from Atlanta, Georgia to Montgomery, Alabama.
The plane was travelling at an altitude of 5,000 feet when both men noticed a
strange aerial vehicle approaching their aircraft. They said it appeared to be
cigarshaped, 400 feet long, and travelling at around 600 miles an hour. They
managed to make out two rows of windows along its side, which glowed bright
white, and a blue light underneath. It had no wings and its trail rocked the
DC-3 as it blasted off. For the rest of the 1940s and 1950s many aeroplanes were
‘buzzed’ by UFOs, and the phenomenon grew to such an extent that military officials
brought in a code that gagged US commercial pilots from talking about their experiences.
On the other side of the border,
in Canada, pilots did not have to follow such regulations. In 1966 a Canadian
Pacific DC-8 was flying at a height of 35,000 feet from Peru to Mexico City when
the crew witnessed something very odd. The Captain, Roger Millbank, was so
certain of what he and his staff had seen that he filed an official report with
Mexican authorities. He said that he and the co-pilot had seen two bright white
lights to the left, which gradually separated and approached the DC-8. The
lights seemed to change in colour and intensity, and they turned into two
distinct beams, pointing in a V-shape. They came nearer still, and finally levelled
off by the airliner’s left wing-tip. Millbank said that in the light of the
full moon they could ‘see a shape between the two lights, a structure which
appeared to have been thicker in the middle’. It remained close to the DC-8 for
a couple more minutes, and then disappeared behind.
On one flight in the 1970s the
passengers on a British Airways jet had a very lighthearted encounter with a
UFO. The plane was flying just south of the Portuguese capital, Lisbon, when
the Captain heard air traffic control issuing a warning about a strange object
in the skies near their flightpath. The crew of the BA flight saw a bright light
in the distance, and a cigar-shaped craft soon appeared close-by. Realising
this was too good an opportunity to miss, the British pilot issued an
announcement over the passenger address system, ‘Ladies and gentlemen, if you
look on the starboard side of the plane, you will see what we believe to be a
UFO.’ The airliner reached its destination safely.
In November 1979, a rather more unpleasant
episode befell the pilot flying a Spanish charter plane from Ibiza to the Spanish
mainland. At an altitude of 24,000 feet a strange subject almost collided with the
airliner. The pilot saw a bright red object, seemingly on a collision course
with his vessel, and began an emergency dive to avoid it. The UFO continued to
buzz round the airliner, and in the end two fighter jets were sent to intercept
the object. The whole incident was witnessed on radar screens and by countless
people watching from the earth below. A similar occurrence happened in the same
area exactly one year later. The pilot of an Iberian Airways jet flying at
31,000 feet suddenly saw an immense green bubble in his flight-path. The
phenomenon was witnessed by six other commercial airlines in the vicinity, and
some reports said it even swooped down on Barcelona Airport.
In recent years, other similar
incidents have occurred. A British Airways 737 was arriving at Manchester
Airport in 1995 when a UFO buzzed near to the side of the plane. An even closer
event happened on 12th June 1998 when an Oslo-bound jet took off from London’s
Heathrow Airport. The plane’s captain reported to air traffic controllers that
they had almost been hit by a small aircraft. Later the co-pilot said he had
seen a very clear bright light and the captain filed an official report
claiming a fighter-sized aeroplane had passed within a 50 metre distance of the
aircraft. Aviation, military and police authorities found no explanation for
the incident, however they say that no matter how safe air travel is, accidents
sometimes do happen. With this level of unexplained aerial activity, perhaps it’s
surprising they do not occur more often.
Source : 100 Strangest Mysteries
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