 |

UFOs and the Media
OMNI Magazine
July, 1991
Belgium's Military Has
Begun to Work
Hand In Hand with Private Groups to
Track UFOs
by Beth Livermore,
Life in the tiny
kingdom of Belgium is anything but harmonious. In fact, ferocious rivalry
between the Flemish up north and the Walloons down south has dominated Belgian
politics for centuries. But according to UFO activists, a mysterious triangular
craft may do much to change this. Belgians from the north and the south, it
seems, have put aside their differences to form what some call the most
coordinated UFO investigation to date.
It all began on November 29, 1989, when hundreds of people from two Belgian
towns—Eupen and Wavre—reported sighting a dark gray deltoid shape, one white
light per tip, gliding across the night sky. The mysterious object, with a
wingspan of 50 to 100 meters, was apparently silent, says Michael Bougard,
president of Belgium's Society for the Study of Space Phenomena (SOBEPS), a
nonprofit citizens' organization. "And no one reported seeing it land."
By March, adds Bougard, "everyone from farmers to teenagers to high-ranking
military officers and professors claimed to have seen the UFO." In addition, on
March 30, controllers at a radar station in Glons detected a foreign object on
their screens. They quickly contacted colleagues at a station in Ghent. The
second station confirmed the presence of a slow-moving blip.
"At this point it had become a scientific problem deserving serious
investigation," says Professor Leon Brenig, a physicist at the Free University
of Brussels. "It couldn't be steel coming back into the atmosphere because the
edges were smooth, not bent. It couldn't be a NATO aircraft because its capacity
for flight seemed to outreach current technology. I decided it was worth my
time."
Apparently the military agreed. Belgium's Air Force contributed two F-16's, an
expert crew, and instruments to a hunt later that spring. Scientists and
citizens participating in the effort formed four watch groups, each responsible
for calling sightings into headquarters, an airport southeast of Liege. The
airport tower, in turn, alerted pilots, who flew planes equipped with infrared
cameras in pursuit of the triangle. The pilots failed to get photographs because
of the deltoid's reported great speed.
Nonetheless, the effort goes on: Engineers and physicists at the Free University
are analyzing radar images of the object. Belgium's Air Force training school,
the Ecole Royale Militaire, is analyzing UFO photos with computers. And
botanists are examining burn patterns in fields where the triangle was
reportedly seen.
"This investigation is unprecedented - its gone further than any I know of,"
says Walter Andrus, international director of Mutual UFO Network, Inc. (MUFON).
"We are impressed that Belgium's military cooperated. That is a major step."
Indeed, adds Lucean Clerebaut, SOBEPS's secretary-general, while the French have
a government office dedicated to UFO study, "this is the first time that a
national authority has worked with a private society in researching UFOs."
Whether or not the Belgians eventually unravel the mystery, the unusual official
effort may affect the perception and pursuit of UFOlogy worldwide.
According to MUFON's Andrus, for instance, in the United States, "every military
and intelligence agency we can identify has been involved in investigating UFOs
since 1947, but they will not share their information. If nothing else, we hope
the efforts of the Belgians will embarrass the U.S. government into admitting
some of what they know," he says.

A Guide to This Site
What's here and how to get there.
Text version of this site
An easy to read black and white version.

|