Secret planet. UFO - the first liquidator of the Chernobyl accident? UFO flights after the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant

UFO and Chernobyl nuclear power plant

On the night of April 26, 1986, at 1 hour 23 minutes, an explosion occurred at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, almost causing the largest disaster in human history. In practice, it was an explosion of an atomic bomb extended over time.

The reactor core of the fourth power unit was destroyed, and a huge amount of radioactive products were released into the atmosphere. The fire engulfed the turbine room and was about to spread to the third power unit. Only a few hours later firefighters managed to put out the flames. Many of them received lethal doses of radiation.

A lot has been written about the Chernobyl accident; it would seem that they have figured out both the physical picture of this disaster and who is directly responsible for what happened. The fourth unit was supposed to be put under scheduled preventive maintenance, but before shutting down the reactor, the Chernobyl NPP management decided to conduct a series of experiments. In particular, they stopped supplying steam to one of the turbogenerators in order to find out how long electricity would be generated due to the rotation of the rotor by inertia. In order to conduct the experiment, part of the emergency protection of the power unit was turned off. At the same time, vibration was studied.

At 1 a.m. on April 25, they began to reduce the power of the power unit, and at 2 p.m., the emergency cooling system was turned off. By this time, the reactor itself had to be completely shut down. But at that moment there was not enough electricity in the Kievenergo system and the dispatcher from Kyiv, who did not know about the experiments being carried out, did not allow the fourth power unit to be stopped. This is how the preconditions for the tragedy arose, the consequences of which many thousands of people still experience.

Fortunately, the powerful explosion turned out to be thermal, i.e. the fourth block was destroyed primarily by superheated steam. The nuclear explosion itself did not occur, although this reactor alone contained about 180 tons of enriched uranium. Happen full blown nuclear explosion, and half of Europe would cease to exist, and people on the other half would be stricken with radiation sickness. Eyewitness accounts suggest that someone intervened in the case.

When abnormal events began to occur at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, a flying saucer appeared above the fourth block. She hung there for six hours, and hundreds of people saw her, but they began to write about it only two years after the disaster.

There is written testimony from Mikhail Andreevich Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the UDC (Directorate of Dosimetric Control) of Chernobyl. On the night of April 26, 1986 Varitsky, together with his partner, UDC dosimetrist Mikhail Samoilenko, was alerted and sent as the senior dosimetrist of the group to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant area. Their task included radiation monitoring at the Government Communications Unit and replacing oxygen cylinders.

The group left in a GAZ-51 car, license plate number 24-28KITS. They had a dosimetric device DP-11b with them. They found themselves in the line of sight of the fourth block at 4 hours and 15 minutes. Having seen the reactor of the power unit destroyed by the explosion blazing (the explosion was still extended over time), and feeling the “burning of the face” (they did not have protective equipment with them, and the device was off scale), professional dosimetrists, understanding the threat of radiation, decided to refuse to immediately carry out missions and return to base for protective equipment. They had already begun to turn the car around when (here we quote the written testimony of M.A. Varitsky):

“We saw a bright brass-colored fireball slowly floating in the sky. It was 6-8 meters in diameter. We took measurements again, switching the instrument scale to a different range. The device showed 3000 milliroentgen/hour. Suddenly, two bright crimson spotlights (two beams) flashed from the ball. These two beams were aimed at the reactor of the fourth block. The object was located approximately 300 meters from the reactor. All this lasted about 3 minutes.

The spotlights suddenly went out, and the ball slowly floated to the northwest, towards . Here we again turned our attention to the device. It was already showing 800 milliroentgen/hour! We ourselves could not explain what happened and therefore we “sinned” on the device. However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be working.”

It turns out that the UFO that appeared on the night of the accident reduced the radiation level by almost four times, preventing a nuclear explosion.

September 16, 1989 At the fourth power unit, problems were again noted, accompanied by the release of large radioactive masses into the atmosphere. A few hours later, at 8:20 am, a working doctor, Iva Naumovna Gospina, observed and photographed an object in the sky above the station, which she describes as “amber”, where one can distinguish the “top” and “bottom”.

One year later, in October 1990, Chernobyl nuclear scientist Alexander Krymov photographed a UFO hanging over the residential buildings of nuclear workers from the window of his apartment. The photo clearly shows the landing legs of the craft, which apparently just took off.

On October 11, 1991 at 20:09 a fire broke out at the second power unit of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. During the fire, the roof above the power generator partially collapsed. October 16, five days later, photojournalist for the newspaper “Echo of Chernobyl” Vladimir Savran, who had worked in Chernobyl since 1986 and had never before been interested in ufology, filmed in the damaged generator room. Here's what he says:

“Just in case, I clicked up, trying to capture part of the hole in the roof at the edge of the frame...”, and further: “Being of sound mind and good memory, I declare: there was no UFO in the sky either before or after. At least visible to the eye. The sky, although gray like autumn, was absolutely clear.”.

However, when Vladimir developed the film, it showed a UFO hanging above the failure of the roof of the second block, reminiscent of the object that Iva Gospina had seen above the Chernobyl nuclear power plant a year before, only photographed from below. The November 1991 issue of the newspaper “Echo of Chernobyl” (where this photo was first published) provides the following editorial comment:

“...the ability of a UFO to be invisible to the human eye and “appear” only on photographic and film films has been reported more than once in the press. Apparently, V. Savran “caught” a similar object. Specialists who, at the request of the editors, have already carefully studied the negative, do not allow any falsification..."

In September 1988, Kiev resident Vadim Vasilyevich Shevchuk observed two luminous objects hanging above the pipe nuclear reactor Kyiv Institute of Nuclear Research, located in the area of ​​the Exhibition of Achievements National economy Ukraine. According to his description, these objects looked the same as the object observed by M. Varitsky and M. Samoilenko over the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on the night of the accident.

Until April 1986, over the territories adjacent to Chernobyl and subsequently contaminated with radiation (some areas of Belarus, Bryansk region and), UFOs were observed extremely rarely, for example, over Kiev over the previous 30 years (from 1956 to 1986), only four cases of appearance were recorded UFO. But, starting in the summer of 1986, observations of strange luminous objects in the sky, UFOs hovering over residential areas, their patrol flights and maneuvers began to become widespread. This is evidenced by numerous eyewitness testimonies received by the Commission on Anomalous Phenomena at the Ukrainian branch of the Scientific and Technical Organization of Radio Electronics and Communications named after. A.S. Popova.

Such evidence also includes observations of air defense radar stations of the Kyiv Military District. November 12, 1989 at 19 hours 46 minutes the command post received a message from the operator (radar station) to Lieutenant Colonel V. Shavanov: “There is a target!” A few minutes before, he was informed that the people of Kiev were observing a luminous object in the evening sky over the territory of the VDNH of the Ukrainian SSR.

Shavanov decided to check the equipment and called home, to the Nivok region. Daughter Irina, who picked up the phone, returned from the balcony excited: “I see a white cross, a rectangle, and in it there is like a fiery spiral, it seems to be pulsating, illuminated.” And although it’s ten kilometers from Nyvok to the exhibition in a straight line, from the balcony of the 9th floor Irina clearly saw the strange object.

The pilot of an interceptor fighter sent to the exhibition area did not find the object in the air. As you know, in the Exhibition area there is the Kiev Institute of Nuclear Research (INR), over whose reactor a UFO was observed.

March 13, 1990 Residents of houses adjacent to the Kyiv television center witnessed another UFO visit. At 22:13 Denis Gnatyuk, Yuri Goncharenko and Dmitry Pinchuk noticed an object in the sky in the form of a “mushroom cap” with a luminous pulsating spot in the center. At the same time, the same object was observed from another point in Kyiv by Sergei Bryzgunov, who was in the area of ​​the Golden Ear Hotel and monitored its movements in the evening sky for half an hour.

Another witness to the maneuvers in the Kiev sky of the same UFO, Alexey Kurganov, observed it from a third point, from the Borshchagovka area. And a few days later, on an early March morning at 7:15 a.m., exactly such an object was photographed by Ruslan Tazhetdinov.

Two months later, in the evening May 16, 1990 at 21:05, full member of VAGO (All-Union Astronomical Geodetic Society) Sergei Ogarkov observed the maneuvers of a lone UFO through a telescope in the western sky. That same night, from May 16 to 17, 1990, the hovering of two UFOs in the form of inverted saucers over the Troeshchina residential area was observed by S.A. Kozinets. On the night of November 7-8, 1990, Kiev resident Yuri Novikov and his daughter observed a gigantic UFO over the Cherry garden area. Here's what he says:

“My daughter and I were gluing wallpaper in a country house on the outskirts of the Kharkov residential area. While working, they didn’t notice that midnight had come. Having finished the job, I went to the water pump in the yard to wash my hands. The night was thick, dark and cool; the light of the moon barely broke through the autumn clouds. And suddenly, something made me turn around and look at the sky. What I saw seemed unreal, ghostly, unnatural. Consciousness refused to perceive what he saw, but this did not change anything. An object of enormous size, cylindrical in shape, gray metallic in color, framed in a faintly shimmering halo, hung from under the low clouds. Its size was amazing: it was no smaller than the high-rise hotel "". There were no lights, no portholes or windows visible on it. The UFO, as if hidden, hung without a single sound or light signal. The daughter who came up, seeing this miracle in the sky, was seriously frightened. And there was a reason! There was a clear feeling that we were being closely examined from this object...”

From 1986 to 1990, more than a dozen observations of single and group UFO flights were carried out by professional pilot Pyotr Vladimirovich Voitsekhovsky. On December 20, 1989, over the village of Irpen, Kyiv region, from 18 to 19 hours, Irpen resident Ivan Kucher observed a luminous object through a telescope, which then moved away towards Kyiv. An hour later, at 20:00, this glowing UFO was spotted in the sky above the Central Kiev Stadium by Kiev photojournalist Lyubov Kalenskaya, who within forty minutes took a series of photographs where the phases of transformation of this object are clearly visible.

October 17, 1990 Ukrainian television in the program “Evening Visnik” showed a videotape where above, in the area of ​​Independence Square, a UFO was visible hanging high in the sky, observed by thousands of Kiev residents.

From these facts the conclusion suggests itself that on the night of April 26, 1986, not only people who heroically walked into the deadly inferno were concerned about the impending catastrophe. In light of this evidence, it becomes clear that the elusive aliens are in fact not at all indifferent to the fate of humanity and the third planet from the Sun.


When My glory passes by, I... will cover you with My hand until I pass by; and when I remove My hand, you will see Me from behind, but My face will not be visible to you
"Exodus", 33, 11-23

Chernobyl, the infamous home of Ukrainian energy, was the site of the most devastating nuclear reactor accident in history.

A lot of water has flown under the bridge since a powerful explosion occurred at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (ChNPP). The largest nuclear disaster in history not involving the use of weapons occurred on the night of April 26, 1986 at 1 hour 23 minutes. The reactor core of the fourth power unit was destroyed, and a huge amount of radioactive products were released into the atmosphere. The fire engulfed the turbine room and was ready to spread to the third power unit of the nuclear power plant. Fortunately, firefighters managed to extinguish the flames after a few hours.

A huge number of books, articles, reports and studies have been written about the tragic events at the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant (there were only four such blocks and each of them could produce up to 1,000 megawatts of electricity). Everyone today is aware of the attempts by the leadership of that time to hide the truth about the scale of the Chernobyl accident (especially in the first weeks and months after the explosion) and the price the Ukrainian people paid for... negligence.

The fourth block was then supposed to be put on scheduled preventative maintenance. But before shutting down the reactor, the Chernobyl NPP management decided to conduct a series of experiments, wanting to find out how long electricity would be generated due to the rotation of the rotor by inertia, and also studied the vibration of the turbine.

At 1 am on April 25, they began to reduce the power of the power unit, and at 2 pm the emergency cooling system of the reactor was turned off. By this time, the reactor itself had to be completely shut down.

But as luck would have it, the Kievenergo system did not have enough electricity at that moment, and the dispatcher from Kyiv, knowing nothing about the experiments being carried out, did not allow the fourth power unit to be stopped. This is how the preconditions for the tragedy arose, the consequences of which many thousands of people still experience.

The Chernobyl reactor was thrown into environment 20 thousand times more radioactivity than the consequences of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki! But it could have been even worse. The fact is that the powerful explosion at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant that occurred on April 26, 1986 turned out to be thermal (the fourth block was destroyed by superheated steam). The worst thing that could have happened - a nuclear explosion - did not happen. Meanwhile, in the reactor of the fourth block alone there were about 180 tons of enriched uranium! If a full-scale nuclear explosion had occurred, half of Europe would have been blown up into the air, and the other half would have died from radiation sickness (by the way, by the year 2000, about 300 thousand people had died from this same radiation sickness).

Europe escaped with only a slight fright! Today we can say so, given the expected scale of the consequences of the Chernobyl accident in the event of a nuclear explosion. The heat was sufficient to cause colossal damage to the economy of Ukraine and the health of many millions of people.

But today, of course, we are talking about something else. Two years after the terrible events at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant (that is, since 1988), in ufological and other publications Soviet Union, and later in the CIS countries specializing in the topic of anomalous phenomena, information begins to flash that a nuclear explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was prevented... UFO!

This version led sensible people to think that someone had started a “duck” (two years had passed, and besides, it turned out beautifully: aliens are the saviors of humanity), but the “duck” turned out to be nothing more than the testimony of many eyewitnesses - direct Participants in the events of that terrible night and Chernobyl victims awakened by the explosion observed a “flying saucer” over the fourth block for six hours.

Since it was impossible to hide the fact of seeing a UFO in the sky over Chernobyl on the night of the accident, the authorities resorted to their usual trick - disinformation of the population. The task turned out to be difficult, since it was easy and simple for individual observers to “shut their mouths,” as was done many times in the long-suffering USSR, but we were talking about hundreds of eyewitnesses, and therefore the authorities began to spread the most crazy rumors and versions, with the goal of discouraging “serious people” from believing into all these “fairy tales” about UFOs over Chernobyl. There was a particularly widespread rumor that a UFO was the “cause of the accident” and even that “a UFO blew up the reactor of the fourth unit”...

Time has dotted the i’s. Ufologists have separated the “wheat from the chaff”, collected a large amount of factual material, and the time has come to think: if a UFO is the liquidator of the Chernobyl accident, then how to evaluate this type of intervention? It turned out that UFO pilots are guardians of survival human race!

Today, a lot has been written and continues to be written about this, and in general about the UFO liquidators of the Chernobyl accident. Moreover, over the course of ten years, with the development of democratic foundations, the tendency of faith rather than doubt is especially noticeable. Almost all voluminous ufological books published throughout the CIS necessarily contain a chapter on the Chernobyl “plates” and sometimes contradictory thoughts about the assistance provided. At the same time, the “miracles” that happened over the Ukrainian nuclear power plant are almost unanimously perceived today by ufologists as an accomplished, evidentiary fact.

One of the first and fruitful researchers of the UFO incident over the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was the Ukrainian ufologist from Gostomel Valery Kratochvil, who collected and analyzed eyewitness testimony and many publications in the press.

In August 1990, V. Kratochvil found the person who was alerted on that tragic night, Mikhail Andreevich Varitsky, a senior dosimetrist of the UDC (Dosimetry Control Department) of Chernobyl, who has been working and living there since the very beginning of the construction of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

The written testimony of M.A. Varitsky talks about how on the night of April 26, 1986, he was alerted and sent as the senior dosimetrist of the group (with him was his partner, UDC dosimetrist Mikhail Samoilenko) to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant area. Their task included radiation monitoring.

The group left in a GAZ-51 car and found itself in the line of sight of the fourth block at 4:15 am.

Having seen how the reactor of the power unit destroyed by the explosion was blazing (the explosion “smeared in time” was still going on), and feeling the “burning of the face” (they did not have protective equipment with them, and the device was “hardening”), professional dosimetrists, understanding the threat of radiation, decided abandon the immediate task and return to base for protective equipment. But as soon as they began to turn the car around, when suddenly... (we quote the written testimony of M.A. Varitsky) - “We saw a bright brass-colored fireball slowly floating in the sky. It was 6-8 meters in diameter. We took measurements again , switching the scale of the device to another range. The device showed 3000 milliroentgen/hour. Suddenly, two bright crimson spotlights flashed from the ball. Two beams were directed at the reactor of the fourth block. The object was located at a distance of approximately 300 meters from the reactor. All this lasted somewhere - then three minutes... The searchlights suddenly went out, and the ball slowly floated to the northwest, towards Belarus. Here we again paid attention to the device. It was already showing... 800 milliroentgen/hour (!). We ourselves could not explain ", what happened, and therefore they "sinned" the device, believing that it had deteriorated. However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be working."

Valery Kratochvil writes: “The given testimony of M.A. Varitsky is of particular interest, since here is a chronicle of the events of that night minute by minute and dosimetric measurements.

Of course, M. Varitsky and M. Samoilenko’s assessments of the size of the object and the distance from it to the reactor are subjective, since here we can only talk about angular dimensions, and not about linear ones. However, the readings of a working instrument and watch are an objective thing, and we have the right to rely on them as documented evidence that on the night of the accident, an unidentified flying object, appearing in the sky almost three hours after the explosion, practically extinguished the “smeared” atomic explosion, knocking down the radiation from 3000 to 800 milli-roentgen/hour, and the rest was completed with difficulty and human sacrifice by Kyiv firefighters."

It turns out that the UFO that appeared on the night of the accident practically reduced the radiation level by almost four times, thereby preventing a nuclear explosion, the consequences of which are scary to even imagine.

On the same night of April 26, Yu.S. Vasilevsky was among the UFO observers in the sky over Chernobyl. Many other eyewitnesses provided V. Kratochvil not only with their impressions of what they saw, but also illustrated the non-trivial event with drawings and photographs.

The story of “UFO over Chernobyl” does not end here; most likely it was just a preface. The fact is that the Chernobyl area, which had almost never previously “complained” about UFO visits, from the moment of the accident found itself literally occupied by “flying saucers”. The 30-kilometer contaminated zone around the Chernobyl nuclear power plant turned out to be particularly generous with anomalies.

Three years later, on September 16, 1989, problems were again noted at the fourth power unit (ufologists will not be surprised by coincidences and improbabilities when it comes to the involvement of UFOs), accompanied by the release of large radioactive masses into the atmosphere. A few hours later, at 8.20 am, a doctor working in Chernobyl, Iva Naumovna Gospina (lives in the city of Slavutich), observed an object in the sky above the station, which she describes as “amber”, where one can distinguish the “top part” and the “bottom” .

A year later, in October 1990, Chernobyl nuclear scientist Alexander Krymov (lives in the same Slavutich) photographed a UFO hanging over the residential buildings of nuclear workers from the window of his apartment. The photo clearly shows the landing legs of the craft, which apparently just took off.

On October 11, 1991, at 20.09, a fire broke out at the second power unit of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, during which a partial collapse of the roof above the power generator occurred. Five days later, Vladimir Savran, a photojournalist for the newspaper “Echo of Chernobyl” (a professional photojournalist, has been working in Chernobyl since 1986, was never interested in ufology and did not believe in UFOs) came here to take pictures in the damaged generator room. This is what he says: “Just in case, I “clicked” the doors, trying to capture part of the hole in the roof at the edge of the frame... Being of sound mind and good memory, I declare: there was no UFO in the sky either before or after. "At least, visible to the eye. The sky, although gray like autumn, was absolutely clear."

However, when Vladimir developed the film, it showed a UFO hanging above the failure of the roof of the second block, reminiscent of the object that Iva Gospina had seen above the Chernobyl nuclear power plant a year before, only photographed from below.

In the November 1991 issue of the newspaper “Echo of Chernobyl” (where this photograph was first published), the following commentary from the editors is given: “... the property of a UFO to be invisible to the human eye and “appear” only on photo and film was reported in the press more than once. Apparently, V. Savran “caught” such an object.”

An analysis carried out by experienced criminologists from the Department of Internal Affairs of the city of Kyiv showed that there can be no talk of defective film or its processing, and even more so of photomontage. In other words, any falsification of the image is excluded.

Unprecedented UFO activity after 1986 was noted not only near and above Chernobyl, but also over territories that were subsequently exposed to hard radiation from radioactive dust (meaning the adjacent areas of Belarus, the Bryansk region and, of course, Kyiv). UFOs were observed here extremely rarely, but starting in the summer of 1986, observations of strange luminous objects in the sky, UFOs hovering over residential areas, and their patrol flights and maneuvers began to become widespread. This is evidenced by numerous eyewitness testimonies that were abundantly received by the Commission on Anomalous Phenomena at the Ukrainian branch of the Scientific and Technical Organization of Radio Electronics and Communications named after. A.S.Popova. The Ukrainian press and the Belarusian press testify to this.

“They say that it was after the Chernobyl accident that Ukraine became the object of close UFO surveillance. What do you think about this?” correspondent Viktor Voronyuk once asked the head of the Main Hydrometeorological Center of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, Colonel Yu.V. Lunev.

A military official, knowledgeable in ufological matters, replied: “...This fact has been noted in military circles. True, not only in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant area, but also in other places.”

The picture of UFO activity over territories that subsequently found themselves under the influence of hard radiation from radioactive dust emerges at least from the evidence below.

From 1986 to 1990, more than a dozen observations of single and group UFO flights in the Kyiv region were carried out by professional pilot P.V. Voitsekhovsky.

In September 1988, V.V. Shevchuk observed two luminous objects above the chimney of the nuclear reactor of the Kyiv Institute of Nuclear Research, located in the VDNKh area. Surprisingly, according to his description, these objects looked the same as the object observed by M. Varitsky and M. Samoilenko over the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on the night of the accident.

On June 24, 1989, a quadrangular UFO hovered in the Obolon residential area.

On June 30, 1989, an oval fiery body hovered over Lake Raduga (within Kyiv) at an altitude of 0.5-1 km.

On July 4, 1989, on the deserted beach of Hydropark, there was an attempt to abduct pensioners - V.P. Ignatenko and L.A. Chuzhik - and the 6-year-old granddaughter of L. Chuzhik by three members of the UFO crew.

In September 1989, an egg-shaped UFO landed in Bila Tserkva.

In October 1989, a UFO landed in the village of Yablunovka.

On November 12, 1989, a UFO was seen over VDNKh.

On November 29, 1989, a “golden-pink ellipse in a cascade of rays” appeared over the Goloseevsky forest.

On December 20, 1989, from 6 to 7 p.m., a UFO was seen over the village of Irpen, and an hour later (at 8 p.m.), the same UFO was spotted above the central stadium of the capital by Lyubov Kalenskaya, who managed to take a series of photographs within 40 minutes.

In December 1989, a UFO landed on a lake near Borodyanka.

On February 23, 1990, over Kiev, “some object hung in the sky, similar to a star, but larger and emitting a very bright light.”

On the same day, in the morning and evening, a UFO was observed by workers of the Darnytsky RVVS.

On March 13, 1990, at 10:13 p.m., residents of houses adjacent to the television center in Kyiv witnessed the flight of a “mushroom-shaped” UFO, which began to divide into segments.

At the same time, the same object was observed from another point in Kyiv by Sergei Bryzgunov, who was in the area of ​​the Zolotoy Kolos hotel and monitored its movements in the evening sky for half an hour. Another witness (A. Kurganov) saw the same UFO from a third point, from the Borshchagovka area.

On April 22, 1990, at 10 p.m., a glowing greenish ball moved in a zigzag pattern from the center of Kyiv in the direction of the Leninskaya Kuznitsa plant.

On May 16, 1990, a UFO was observed by S. Ogarkov in the western sky.

On the night of May 16-17, 1990, two UFOs hovered over the Troeshchina residential area.

On October 17, 1990, in the afternoon, in front of thousands of people, a mysterious white ball maneuvered over the central part of Kyiv for 6 hours.

On the night of November 7–8, 1990, a “huge cylindrical object” appeared over the Cherry massif.

06/20/1991 at 9.45 a UFO in the form of dumbbells flew over the Raiduzhny residential area... etc. and so on.

Increasing observations of anomalous objects in Chernobyl-contaminated areas have led some researchers to believe that there are permanent UFO bases in these areas (much has been written and discussed about this). True, no factual evidence of this has yet been found.

As for Belarus, local ufologists claim that almost the entire territory of the republic after 1986 is a complete anomaly. After 80 percent of the territory was covered with radioactive emissions from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, the frequency of appearances of UFOs and aliens in the affected areas increased several times.

In September 1986, two women from the Grodno region saw the landing of a shining ball. When they approached the UFO, it suddenly released a “fog”, the women began to feel sick and ran away.

In subsequent years, there were many reports of UFO creatures in the areas of Belarus affected by the Chernobyl accident.

On the night of April 2-3, 1990, the aliens became so bold that they appeared in the very center of Minsk. According to an eyewitness's description, "the creatures had bald, lumpy heads, height - about 180 cm, pink bodies, "like babies."

In Belarus we saw other types of creatures, a variety of UFO forms, and encountered the most incredible anomalies. In the most famous “zone”, located near Nestorki and Latygol, there is not a single local resident who has not seen “something like that”. With all this, ufologists are unanimous: UFO activity is associated with the Chernobyl accident.

Maybe UFOs really showed up to help suffering humanity? First, they prevented a nuclear explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, and then took the areas affected by radioactive emissions under strict control? This is fully consistent with all of the above, although some ufologists are skeptical about the assistance provided to humanity by aliens.

Vladimir Azhazha, in one of his latest books, “Under the Cap of Another Mind” (Moscow, 2002), states: “The aliens are not very concerned about the fate of the human race as such. They are concerned about the living conditions on our planet, which for some reason are part of their immediate interests aliens. In cases where ecological situation something seriously threatens, aliens interfere in the actions of people, even sometimes help them."

Is this so?.. Be that as it may, part of V.G. Azhazhi’s statement is true.

Let's look through the yellowed pages of history. The increased interest of UFOs in areas associated with the use of nuclear energy was noted back in the 1940s, when UFO sightings were recorded over the Los Alamos Nuclear Center (it is appropriate to recall that work on the “Manhattan Project” was underway in Los Alamos at that time ", that is, the first atomic bomb)...

According to a former employee of the Swiss consulate in Japan, the day after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima (August 7, 1945), a kind of “phantom” (ghost) of the center of Hiroshima, as it was before the atomic explosion, appeared in the sky above the destroyed city. Houses, streets with passers-by, trees, flowers, a beautiful humpbacked bridge along which children were walking, etc. were clearly visible in the sky. This ghost appeared within three days after the explosion and was observed for several hours each time.

The impression, as an eyewitness reports, was as if someone (?) was specially showing a film, showing a beautiful city that existed yesterday and has been turned into radioactive ashes today. It was as if someone wanted to say: “People! Look what you’ve done!”

Since 1947, objects similar to “silver disks” have been observed many times over the state of New Mexico, where nuclear tests took place during these years. It was here, above the Roswell military base, that one of the disk-like objects crashed. Materials on the accident were immediately classified, although information was leaked to the press and even photographs of the injured “flying saucer”, as well as crew members, were published.

It should be noted that UFOs did not ignore any of the places nuclear tests on the ground. Almost over all test sites where nuclear explosions were (or are) carried out (the French test site in the Sahara, the American test site in Nevada, Soviet nuclear test sites on the island of Novaya Zemlya, in the area of ​​​​Semipalatinsk, etc.), almost after every explosion UFOs are observed patrolling this area.

Some of these test sites have turned into real anomalous zones, where the number of unexplained things is many orders of magnitude higher than in normal areas. This is indisputable evidence that UFOs are concerned about our nuclear arsenal, and each of us knows that a “peaceful atom” is not always so.

Returning to the Chernobyl tragedy, we are again forced to ask the question: what caused the increased interest of UFOs in the areas affected by the Chernobyl explosion?

Direct participation in the liquidation of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant of an unknown object, as well as unprecedented UFO activity in subsequent years over the areas adjacent to Chernobyl, Kiev, Belarus, suggests that UFO pilots are extremely concerned about the state of the Earth’s ecosphere and, most likely, human self-confidence to play with fire.

But that’s why they are “highly developed” to help the lost sheep. A man once tamed a dog, warmed him up, gave him something to drink, and out of duty, now “a dog is man’s friend”...


References:

V. Kratochvil "UFO - time machine" (-K.: 1993);
V. Kratochvil "UFO - the first liquidator of the Chernobyl accident" ("Interesting Newspaper", No. 5 (80), 2000);
"Izvestia" dated November 9, 1991;
A. Varakin, L. Zdanovich “Secrets of the UFO” (-M.: “Ripol Classic”, 2000);
V. Azhazha “Under the “cap” of Another Mind” (-M.: “Ripol Classic”, 2002).

P.S. This article is a chapter.

On the night of April 26, 1986, at 1 hour 23 minutes, an explosion occurred at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, almost causing the largest disaster in human history. In practice, it was an explosion of an atomic bomb extended over time.

The reactor core of the fourth power unit was destroyed, and a huge amount of radioactive products were released into the atmosphere. The fire engulfed the turbine room and was about to spread to the third power unit of the nuclear power plant. Only a few hours later firefighters managed to put out the flames. Many of them received lethal doses of radiation.

A lot has been written about the Chernobyl accident; it would seem that they have figured out both the physical picture of this disaster and who is directly responsible for what happened. The fourth unit was supposed to be put under scheduled preventive maintenance, but before shutting down the reactor, the Chernobyl NPP management decided to conduct a series of experiments. In particular, steam was no longer supplied to one of the turbogenerators in order to find out how long electricity would be generated due to the rotation of the rotor by inertia. In order to conduct the experiment, part of the emergency protection of the power unit was turned off. At the same time, turbine vibration was studied.

At 1 a.m. on April 25, they began to reduce the power of the power unit, and at 2 p.m., the emergency cooling system was turned off. By this time, the reactor itself had to be completely shut down. But at that moment there was not enough electricity in the Kievenergo system and the dispatcher from Kyiv, who did not know about the experiments being carried out, did not allow the fourth power unit to be stopped. This is how the preconditions for the tragedy arose, the consequences of which many thousands of people still experience.

Fortunately, the powerful explosion turned out to be thermal, meaning that the fourth block was primarily destroyed by superheated steam. The nuclear explosion itself did not occur, although this reactor alone contained about 180 tons of enriched uranium. If there were a full-scale nuclear explosion, one half of Europe would cease to exist, and people on the other half would be stricken with radiation sickness. By some miracle, the disaster did not happen. Eyewitness accounts suggest that aliens were involved.

When abnormal events began to occur at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, a flying saucer appeared above the fourth block. She hung there for six hours, and hundreds of people saw her, but they began to write about it only two years after the accident.

There is written testimony from Mikhail Andreevich Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the UDC (Directorate of Dosimetric Control) of Chernobyl. On the night of April 26, 1986, Varitsky, together with his partner, UDC dosimetrist Mikhail Samoilenko, was alerted and sent to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant area. Their task included radiation monitoring at the government communications center and replacing oxygen cylinders. The group left in a GAZ-51 car, license plate number 24-28KITS. They had a DP-11-B field beta-gamma radiometer with them. They found themselves in the line of sight of the fourth block at 4 hours and 15 minutes. Having seen how the reactor of the power unit destroyed by the explosion was blazing (the explosion was still extended over time), and feeling the “burning of the face” (they did not have protective equipment with them, and the device was off scale), professional dosimetrists, understanding the threat of radiation, decided to postpone the task and return to base for protective equipment.

They had already begun to turn the car around when (here we quote the written testimony of M.A. Varitsky): “We saw a bright brass-colored fireball slowly floating in the sky. It was 6-8 meters in diameter. We took measurements again, switching the instrument scale to a different range. The device showed 3000 milliroentgen/hour. Suddenly, two bright crimson spotlights (two beams) flashed from the ball. These two beams were aimed at the reactor of the fourth block. The object was located approximately 300 meters from the reactor. All this lasted about 3 minutes.

The spotlights suddenly went out, and the ball slowly floated to the northwest, towards Belarus. Here we again turned our attention to the device. It was already showing 800 milliroentgen/hour! We ourselves could not explain what happened and therefore we “sinned” on the device. However, when we returned to the base and checked it, the device turned out to be working.”

It turns out that the UFO that appeared on the night of the accident reduced the radiation level by almost four times, preventing a nuclear explosion.

On September 16, 1989, problems were again noted at the fourth power unit, accompanied by the release of large radioactive masses into the atmosphere.



A few hours later, at 8:20 a.m., a doctor working at Chernobyl, Iva Naumovna Gospina, observed and photographed an object in the sky above the station that she describes as “amber”, where a “top” and a “bottom” could be distinguished. .

A year later, in October 1990, Chernobyl nuclear scientist Alexander Krymov photographed a UFO hanging over the residential buildings of nuclear workers from the window of his apartment. The photo on the left shows the landing legs of the vehicle, which apparently has just taken off.

On October 11, 1991 at 20:09 a fire broke out at the second power unit of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. During the fire, the roof above the power generator partially collapsed. On October 16, five days later, photojournalist for the newspaper “Echo of Chernobyl” Vladimir Savran, who had worked in Chernobyl since 1986 and had never before been interested in ufology, filmed in the damaged generator room. This is what he says: “Just in case, I clicked up, trying to capture part of the hole in the roof at the edge of the frame...”, and further, “being of sound mind and good memory, I declare: in the sky there is neither before nor after that there was no UFO. At least visible to the eye. The sky, although gray like autumn, was absolutely clear.” However, when Vladimir developed the film, it showed a UFO hanging above the failure of the roof of the second block, reminiscent of the object that Iva Gospina had seen above the Chernobyl nuclear power plant a year before, only photographed from below.



In the November 1991 issue of the newspaper “Echo of Chernobyl” (where this photograph was first published), the following commentary from the editors is given: “... the property of a UFO to be invisible to the human eye and “appear” only on photographic and film films was reported in the press not once. Apparently, V. Savran “caught” a similar object. Specialists who, at the request of the editors, have already carefully studied the negative, do not allow any falsification.”

In September 1988, Kiev resident Vadim Vasilyevich Shevchuk observed two luminous objects hanging above the chimney of the nuclear reactor of the Kyiv Institute of Nuclear Research, located in the area of ​​​​the Exhibition of Achievements of the National Economy of Ukraine. According to his description, these objects looked the same as the object observed by M. Varitsky and M. Samoilenko over the fourth block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant on the night of the accident.

Until April 1986, UFOs were observed extremely rarely over the territories adjacent to Chernobyl and subsequently contaminated with radiation (some areas of Belarus, Bryansk region and Kiev), for example, over Kiev over the previous 30 years (from 1956 to 1986), only four cases were recorded UFO appearances. But starting in the summer of 1986, observations of strange luminous objects in the sky, UFOs hovering over residential areas, and their patrol flights and maneuvers began to become widespread.

Such evidence also includes observations of air defense radar stations of the Kyiv Military District. On November 12, 1989, at 19:46, the command post received a message from the radar operator (radar station) to Lieutenant Colonel V. Shavanov: “There is a target!” A few minutes before, he was informed that the people of Kiev were observing a luminous object in the evening sky over the territory of the VDNH of the Ukrainian SSR.

Shavanov decided to double-check the equipment and called home, to the Nivok region. Daughter Irina, who picked up the phone, returned from the balcony excited: “I see a white cross, a rectangle, and there seems to be a fiery spiral in it, it seems to be pulsating, illuminated.” And although it’s ten kilometers from Nyvok to the exhibition in a straight line, from the balcony of the 9th floor Irina clearly saw the strange object.

The pilot of an interceptor fighter sent to the exhibition area did not find the object in the air. As you know, in the Exhibition area there is the Kiev Institute of Nuclear Research (INR), over whose reactor a UFO was observed.

On December 20, 1989, over the village of Irpen, Kyiv region, from 6 to 7 p.m., Irpen resident Ivan Kucher observed a luminous object through a telescope, which then moved away towards Kyiv. An hour later, at 20:00, this glowing UFO was spotted in the sky above the Central Kiev Stadium by Kiev photojournalist Lyubov Kalenskaya, who within forty minutes took a series of photographs where the phases of transformation of this object are clearly visible.



On October 17, 1990, Ukrainian television in the “Evening Messenger” program showed a videotape where a UFO was seen hanging high in the sky over Khreshchatyk, in the area of ​​Independence Square, and was observed by thousands of Kiev residents. However, this is the story of another disaster.

Animals left Chernobyl before the disaster because they knew that a portal to hell would soon open...

The largest nuclear disaster in human history occurred on April 26, 1986 at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. The explosion of the fourth reactor caused the slow and painful death of more than 200 thousand people, and total number The victims, according to various estimates, amount to 3-4 million residents of the entire disaster zone. It is still shrouded in many secrets and legends - strange harbingers and consequences...

Animal prophets

Some details of the emergency ceased to be kept in the strictest confidence only decades after those terrible events. And we are talking not only about the true number of victims, but also about the incidents that preceded them. Back in January, four months before the accident, there was not a single domestic animal left within a radius of 30 kilometers from the site of the impending explosion. The pets first began to behave strangely - they banged their heads against the wall, became aggressive, screamed and rushed around the apartment.


In February of the same year, the newspaper “Youth of Ukraine” published a small article about how all the pets had strangely disappeared. They escaped and the incident was attributed to mass disease. All the poles in Chernobyl were covered with announcements of rewards for found pets, but none of them were found. It turns out that thousands of animals immediately ran away from their homes of their own free will, anticipating trouble?


Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant – a portal to hell?

One of the participants in the events in Chernobyl, Lydia Arkhangelskaya, several years ago published her memories of visiting the disaster zone. She admitted that she did not see a single living creature other than people while working there. Lydia said:

“Even the crows didn’t circle. It was terrifying. Before going to bed, we often discussed what really happened to the nuclear power plant - we could not believe that scientists were the culprits. They said different things - as if scientists had opened the entrance to hell and real evil had escaped from the underworld to earth. Locals they said that the day after the accident they saw the face of the devil.”

Aliens – enemies or helpers?

Eyewitnesses-liquidators also spoke about strange objects in the sky, similar to flying saucers. Soviet ufologist Vladimir Azhazha was sure that aliens had a hand in what happened in Chernobyl. Shortly before his death in 2009, he gave an interview:

“I personally interviewed more than a hundred people who saw a UFO on the eve of what happened in Chernobyl, and on the night of the disaster, and even weeks later. In total, four types of unidentified flying objects were observed in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant zone. These are traditional disc-shaped “plates” with a dome on top, cigars, luminous balls and triangles that constantly change color. I want to believe that alien intelligence has finally come to our aid.”

Following him, other paranormal specialists rushed to collect eyewitness accounts. Valery Kratochvil, a scientist from Gostomel, collected and analyzed the testimony of witnesses who participated in the liquidation of the consequences of the disaster, with whom his predecessor did not have time to talk. Many of them saw fireballs “floating” in the sky above the reactor. And even after 1986, UFOs were often seen over Chernobyl. However, they did not want to make direct contact with the person.

Mutant vegetables

After the disaster, rumors quickly began to spread about zombies, mutated animals and people glowing in the dark. No one could confirm their existence, but there was evidence that there were vegetables of unprecedented size.


The soil around Chernobyl was quite poor, so it absorbed radioactive cesium and strontium like a sponge. These extremely dangerous metals acted as super fertilizers. People ate them and became infected with a deadly disease that changed not only their body, but also their consciousness...

On April 26, 1986, at 1 hour 23 minutes, the largest nuclear disaster in the history of the last century occurred - the fourth power unit of the Chernobyl gas station exploded. This event is still shrouded in secrets and legends...

Animal escape

Officially Chernobyl disaster presented to the whole world as the negligence of Soviet nuclear scientists. Allegedly, due to inattention, they made some mistakes, the emergency protection did not work, the reactor overheated and exploded. Soon the specific “culprits” were named - the director, chief engineer, head of the reactor department and other employees of lower rank. Many were sent to jail, the materials of the case were classified. Only over time, when those involved in the events of those days were released and representatives of government agencies simply died, new details of the emergency began to appear in various sources.

The most interesting thing in the emerging circumstances is not that the authorities hid the true number of victims, kept silent about the agony in which the soldiers thrown to eliminate the consequences died, working without any protective equipment at all, and some officials from the Chernobyl NPP management bought their way out of prison with bribes... The mystical details of the Chernobyl events are interesting. For example, this fact: at the time of the incident, there was practically not a single domestic animal left several tens of kilometers from the outbreak.

Back in early 1986, residents of Chernobyl, Pripyat and other settlements in the surrounding area they began to notice that their pets were behaving restlessly. Calm domestic cats suddenly became wild and could begin to rush around the apartment, scream, and throw themselves at their owners’ feet. The dogs that were taken for a walk tried to escape; many chewed their leashes and ran away. Even the birds behaved strangely - parrots could bang their heads against the wall.

In the newspaper “Youth of Ukraine” in February 1986, a small article was published that spoke about a strange epidemic in the city of Pripyat. It was about the unusual behavior of animals, which was explained by a mass disease and was recommended to all pet owners to consult a veterinarian.

At the same time, as eyewitnesses note, poles in the cities were covered with notices of missing dogs and cats. There is information that more than a thousand animals have escaped from their homes. What is this if not a premonition of trouble for which our smaller brothers are famous?

Portal to hell

Lydia Arkhangelskaya, a representative of the Moscow branch of the Chernobyl Union, an organization uniting liquidators from all over the CIS, and in those years a participant in the events in Chernobyl, recalls that during the entire time she worked at the disaster site, she did not see a single representative of the fauna.

“There were neither living nor corpses. Even the crows didn’t circle,” says Lydia. - Of course, all this was terrifying. Although we had no fear at all. For us, young people, the trip to Chernobyl was an adventure, we did not realize that health could be harmed, we did not even know what radiation was - we became familiar with it and its consequences only years later. And then... I remember in the evenings we went to bed in eight-bed rooms and before going to bed we speculated about what really happened at the nuclear power plant. Somehow no one believed that our scientists had screwed up anything. There were different versions, sometimes the most incredible. They said, for example, that scientists had discovered the entrance to hell and evil came to earth from the underworld... Some locals said that the day after the disaster they allegedly saw the face of the devil in the sky, looking down and laughing...

Many local Zhigels, in conversations with liquidators who came to help from all over the Union, talked about strange objects in the sky, similar to flying saucers. Thus, the famous Soviet ufologist Vladimir Azhazha was once convinced that Chernobyl could not have happened without aliens. He just didn’t find out what they were doing there: whether they caused a disaster or, on the contrary, helped to prevent it. In one of his last interviews (he passed away in 2009), Azhazha said:

“I personally interviewed more than a hundred people who saw a UFO on the eve of what happened in Chernobyl, and on the night of the disaster, and even weeks later. I can assure you that they were telling the truth, because people who did not know each other lived in different cities tens of kilometers from each other, they described completely identical alien ships. In total, four types of unidentified flying objects were observed in the Chernobyl nuclear power plant zone. These are traditional disc-shaped “plates” with a dome on top, cigars, luminous balls and “triangles” that constantly change color. What their mission is is the mystery of my whole life. But I want to believe that alien intelligence has come to our aid.” Independently from Azhazhi, another ufologist conducted his investigation into the participation of UFOs in the Chernobyl incident - the famous Ukrainian scientist from Gostomel Valery Kratochvil, who collected and analyzed eyewitness testimony in the book “UFO - Time Machine”.

Kratochvil managed to find the person who was alerted on that tragic night - Mikhail Andreevich Varitsky, senior dosimetrist of the Chernobyl UDC (dosimetric control department), who has been working and living there since the very beginning of the construction of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. He told the ufologist that on the night of the emergency, he and a group of dosimetrists went to the fourth power unit on an urgent call. At the entrance, seeing the reactor of the unit destroyed by the explosion blazing, and feeling a “burning sensation in the face,” the specialists, understanding the threat of radiation, decided to abandon the immediate task and return to base for protective equipment. But as soon as they began to turn around their car, a GAZ-51, “...they saw a bright brass-colored fireball slowly floating in the sky. It was 6-8 meters in diameter and hovered at a distance of approximately 300 meters from the fourth unit reactor. All this lasted about three minutes... The ball suddenly turned pale, became barely noticeable, and slowly floated to the northwest, towards Belarus. What is most interesting: when we turned around, the instruments showed radiation of 3000 milliroentgen/hour, and after the UFO flew by - 800 milliroentgen/hour. It is impossible to explain this scientifically.”

But the real UFO boom happened after 1986 - both over Chernobyl and over territories that were contaminated with radiation (adjacent areas of Belarus, Bryansk region and, of course, Kyiv). According to the reporting documents of the Commission on Anomalous Phenomena at the Ukrainian branch of the Scientific and Technical Organization of Radio Electronics and Communications named after. A. S. Popov from 1990, within 4 years after the incident, more than 8 thousand UFO sightings were registered. Most of all - above the Pripyat River, above Lake Raduga (within Kiev), in the area of ​​Belaya Tserkov, the villages of Yablunovka and Brodyanka and above the Goloseevsky forest.

Message from Tesla

Another curious fact related to Chernobyl has haunted mystics for many years. The thing is that exactly 25 minutes before the explosion, when nothing had happened yet, seismic stations scattered across the globe recorded a powerful seismic wave. Today there are records of dozens of devices installed, for example, in Germany, Israel and even Canada, which reported an incident before it began!

Of course, you can again pick up a rumor associated with a message from hell - something burst out of the bowels of the earth, and so it shook it quite a bit. But another version looks much more sensible. So, according to one of the researchers of the incident, scientist Pyotr Voitsekhovsky, the explosion is the result of the Americans testing a secret weapon. “The explosion comes not from Satan, but from Nikola Tesla,” Woitsekhovsky suggested. — He conducted experiments on the transfer of impact force over a distance; perhaps one of his followers repeated the experiment. Why was it chosen for him? nuclear power plant? Well, it’s always more interesting and resonant than just throwing a clap in the taiga. In addition, the radiation would hardly have reached the United States, but if it covers half of Europe, God bless it.”

By the way, economists say that the only country that benefited from what happened in Chernobyl was... America. After the explosion, work on the construction of several hundred nuclear power plants was mothballed throughout Europe (14 construction sites were closed in Germany alone). The whole of Europe, which began to abandon nuclear power plants, began to switch to oil, which soared in price. In one year after the disaster, the US budget increased by 37 billion(!) dollars. So, maybe it was a planned sabotage? An undeclared war using secret weapons?

This is destiny

As you know, all events significant for history were always predicted by someone. Moreover, we are not talking about home-grown psychics and clairvoyants. Historians, esotericists and scientists unanimously insist that the Chernobyl events are described in the Bible, which means that it was impossible to avoid them and there is no one to blame for them except fate itself.

A fragment in the “Revelation of St. John the Evangelist":
“...and a great star fell from heaven, burning like a lamp, and fell on a third of the rivers and on the springs of water. The name of this star is Wormwood; and a third of the waters became wormwood, and many of the people died from the waters, because they became bitter...” (Rev. 8:10). The fact is that “wormwood” in Ukrainian is exactly what it means – “Chernobyl”.

Of course, the great Nostradamus could not help but talk about the coming catastrophe: “The face of the Sphinx will be revealed on the Red Planet, which brought many troubles to the people. In 13 years, a comet will arrive, and five new disasters will kill people.” "The Face of the Sphinx" was discovered by the American spaceship"Viking" on the surface of Mars in 1973, and 13 years later - in 1986 - Halley's Comet approached the Earth, 2 weeks after its closest approach to the Earth, an accident occurred at the 4th block of the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. Apparently, this was one of the “five new disasters” that Nostradamus predicted would take people away. However, the most amazing prophecy is the film by Andrei Tarkovsky “Stalker”, based on the script of the Strugatsky brothers. One of the reasons for the emergence of the “Zone” in the scenario is an accident in the fourth bunker. And this was six years before the actual explosion in the fourth block of the nuclear reactor and the emergence of a 30-kilometer “exclusion zone.”

There is another legend about Chernobyl associated with cinema. According to some station workers, a few days before the accident they saw a man with giant wings in the sky. It was as if he was observed above the flames of the fire that broke out after the explosion. Inspired by these stories, director Mark Pellington made the film Mothman. According to the tape, the “Mothman” warns people of impending disasters. The film's credits state that it is based on real events -according to stories eyewitnesses who survived Chernobyl.