What Really Flew Over Congo?

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has a small but revealing UFO record: a handful of Cold War-era intelligence reports, a few modern public reports, and several local “mystery object” incidents that were treated seriously by residents or authorities before being explained, downgraded, or left unresolved.

Preview for What Really Flew Over Congo?

Why the DRC UFO record is thin but not empty

The first thing to know is that the DRC does not have a large, well-maintained public UFO archive comparable to the best-known American, British, French, or South American collections. The National UFO Reporting Center lists only two entries under “Democratic Republic of the Congo”, alongside two under the broader “Congo” label, which is a tiny footprint for a country of the DRC’s size and population. That does not prove that unusual aerial events are rare; it more likely shows that English-language reporting routes, internet access, language barriers, local media priorities, and trust in public reporting systems all shape what becomes searchable. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgReports by LocationReports by Location

Overview image for Democratic Republic of the Congo This matters because Congolese UFO material often reaches researchers through indirect channels: declassified foreign intelligence summaries, local news reports, reposted social media footage, or later witness submissions. Each route has different weaknesses. Intelligence files may preserve a striking report but omit local follow-up. Local news may capture public reaction but not technical analysis. Social media can surface photographs quickly but can also detach them from place, time, and context. Modern UAP research bodies such as NASA and the All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office have repeatedly stressed that many reports fail because the available data are vague, incomplete, or poorly calibrated, a problem that applies even more sharply to older and remote cases. [NASA Science]science.nasa.govScience Independent Study Team ReportScience Independent Study Team Report

The 1952 Elizabethville uranium-mines case

The most famous Congo-linked UFO report predates the modern DRC state. In 1952, during the Belgian Congo period, a CIA-listed document described two “fiery” disc-shaped objects reported over uranium mines near the Elizabethville district, now Lubumbashi in the DRC’s south-east. The CIA later highlighted “Flying Saucers Reported Over Belgian Congo Uranium Mines, 1952” in its public “X-Files” collection, which confirms that the document exists in the agency’s declassified UFO corpus. [CIA]cia.govTake a Peek Into Our "X-FilesTake a Peek Into Our "X-Files

The case has several features that explain its long afterlife in UFO literature: the alleged location near uranium mines, a military or aviation witness named Commander Pierre, a reported pursuit by aircraft, and claims of extreme speed and unusual manoeuvres. A specialist summary of the CIA file describes two disc-like objects over the Elizabethville area, a 10-to-12-minute performance, pursuit from the local airfield, and an estimated speed of roughly 1,500 kilometres per hour. [Gralien Report]gralienreport.comSource details in endnotes.

Those details are dramatic, but the evidential position is weaker than the story sounds. The report appears to preserve an extraordinary account rather than a completed investigation with radar data, recovered material, multiple named witness statements, or a clear official conclusion. The uranium setting also cuts both ways. For believers, it suggests the familiar UFO-and-nuclear-sites theme. For a historian, it points first to Cold War sensitivity: uranium, colonial security, and intelligence interest were already linked in the early nuclear age. The case is therefore best classified as historically important and contested, not confirmed.

Democratic Republic of the Congo illustration 1

The 1965 Kerekere fragment: a “UFO crash” that points back to Earth

The strongest DRC-related “crash” claim is the 1965 Kerekere fragment case. It is often retold as a recovered UFO fragment from the “Republic of the Congo”, but the geography is easily confused because “Republic of the Congo” could mean Congo-Léopoldville at the time, not today’s Congo-Brazzaville. Kerekere is treated in later analysis as belonging to the present-day Democratic Republic of the Congo, which makes the case relevant to this page’s scope. [JASON COLAVITO]jasoncolavito.comthe 1965 congo ufo crashthe 1965 congo ufo crash

The opening of the declassified exploitation report is genuinely intriguing: a metallic fragment was reportedly recovered near Kerekere after an unidentified flying object exploded and fell to earth between 10 and 15 October 1965, with a ground search organised afterwards. But the rest of the file undermines the extraterrestrial reading. The report’s conclusion identified the object as an electrical component made of terrestrial materials, including silicon steel laminate, and said its damaged state prevented determination of its exact country of origin. No unusual isotope, element, or material signature is reported in the available discussion. [JASON COLAVITO]jasoncolavito.comthe 1965 congo ufo crashthe 1965 congo ufo crash

The Cold War setting makes a terrestrial explanation more plausible. The Congo crisis from 1960 to 1965 was a major arena of US-Soviet competition: the US State Department’s historical account describes Soviet-bloc involvement, CIA concern over Patrice Lumumba, Mobutu’s coups, and US military and intelligence support during the period. In that context, a recovered hot metallic fragment in eastern or central Congo would have been interesting as possible military or intelligence debris even if it had nothing to do with extraterrestrial craft. [Office of the Historian]history.state.govOffice of the Historian Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign RelationsOffice of the Historian Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations

This is the clearest lesson from the Kerekere file: a document can use the phrase “unidentified flying object” and still end in a mundane or military-technical conclusion. In UFO research terms, the case belongs in the “initially unidentified, later probably terrestrial” category, not in the “unexplained crash retrieval” category.

Kinshasa and Kimbanseke: when falling debris becomes a neighbourhood mystery

On 9 June 2012, an unidentified metallic object reportedly fell in Kimbanseke, a commune of Kinshasa, digging a hole roughly four metres wide and two metres deep. Radio Okapi reported that hundreds of curious residents gathered at the site, while a witness described a dark object coming from the sky and shaking a palm tree before impact. The local mayor, Edouard Gatembo, urged residents not to panic and called for specialists to determine the nature of the object. [Radio Okapi]radiookapi.netSource details in endnotes.

The Kimbanseke case is important because it was not simply a distant light in the sky. It involved an alleged impact site, physical damage, local witnesses, and a municipal response. Yet the public record available in open sources does not provide the later laboratory identification that would be needed to move the case from “unidentified debris” to a stronger category. Radio Okapi also noted that it was reportedly the third similar object to fall in Kimbanseke under comparable circumstances, which suggests either repeated debris events, repeated rumours, or a local cluster that never received adequate public technical follow-up. [Radio Okapi]radiookapi.netSource details in endnotes.

A cautious reading is therefore more useful than a sensational one. Kimbanseke shows how a real physical event can remain publicly unresolved if recovery details, photographs, expert inspection, and official conclusions are not preserved in accessible form. For DRC UFO chronology, it is a significant local incident. For evidence of non-human technology, it is not enough.

Bas-Uele 2020: the best-documented debunked case

The 2020 Bas-Uele incident is the cleanest modern example of a Congolese “UFO” moving from mystery to identification. Reuters reported that an unidentified flying object parachuted into dense forest in northern DRC, prompting confusion among local authorities and the detention of two people who had arrived to search for it. Images showed a large silver-coloured device with solar panels and wires, trailing a deflated balloon. The object landed about 10 kilometres south of Buta, the provincial capital, and Governor Valentin Senga said local intelligence and aviation authorities initially lacked information about the overflight. [Reuters]reuters.comUFO' in Congo jungle turns out to be internet balloon | ReutersUFO' in Congo jungle turns out to be internet balloon | Reuters

The explanation came when Loon, an Alphabet subsidiary, confirmed that it had carried out a controlled landing of one of its stratospheric internet balloons in the region. Reuters reported that Loon’s balloons travelled around 20 kilometres above Earth and acted as floating cell towers for remote areas; the company also said the landing had been coordinated with local air traffic control and approved by the civil aviation authority. [Reuters]reuters.comSilver monolith appears in Congo, prompting suspicion and selfies | ReutersSilver monolith appears in Congo, prompting suspicion and selfies | Reuters

This case is valuable because it contains the whole arc that many UFO cases lack: public alarm, official uncertainty, a recoverable object, corporate identification, and a plausible technical explanation. It also shows why region-level context matters. In a remote province, a high-altitude telecommunications balloon descending under parachute is likely to look far stranger than it would to the engineers who launched it.

Democratic Republic of the Congo illustration 2

Kinshasa’s 2021 monolith was a social mystery, not an aerial one

In February 2021, a 12-foot metallic monolith appeared at a roundabout in Kinshasa’s Bandal neighbourhood, drawing crowds, selfies, police attention, and speculation about hidden or extraterrestrial origins. Reuters reported that similar objects had recently appeared in Utah, Romania, and Turkey, making the Kinshasa object part of a global copycat-monolith trend rather than a conventional UFO event. Residents eventually destroyed and burned it. [Reuters]reuters.comDR Congo government says M23 rebels, Rwanda disrupting local air trafficDR Congo government says M23 rebels, Rwanda disrupting local air traffic

The monolith still belongs in a DRC UFO-adjacent archive because it shows how extraterrestrial framing can attach to mysterious objects even when the object never flew. Reuters noted that “extraterrestrial intervention appeared unlikely” because residents said people had been seen digging a hole at the roundabout before the object appeared. It was closer to public art, prank, or viral culture than to an aerial phenomenon. [Reuters]reuters.comThis announcement follows a recent agreement in Doha between the Congolese government and AFC/M23, mediated by Qatar, to deploy U.N. ceas…

Its real value is interpretive. It demonstrates that modern Congolese mystery-object stories are shaped by global media loops as much as by local eyewitness experience. The same public that saw news of monoliths elsewhere could interpret a Kinshasa installation through science-fiction imagery, secret-society rumours, and recent memories of the Bas-Uele balloon.

Recent sighting databases: useful leads, weak evidence

The National UFO Reporting Center’s two DRC entries are useful as leads, but they are not verified investigations. One entry describes an event in Kinshasa on 2 January 1972, reported only in October 2024, involving two observers near a mission house by the Congo River who recalled a bright orb-like object during a meteor shower. The record itself shows the long delay: the claimed event occurred in 1972 but was reported more than five decades later, which greatly limits reliability. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.

The other NUFORC DRC entry is stranger from a data-quality perspective. It is listed under South Kivu on 2 January 2025, but the location details say “Tseung Kwan O pier”, a place name associated with Hong Kong rather than South Kivu. The narrative describes lights observed from a promenade and “slow satellite speed”, which may indicate either a database-location error, a misplaced report, or a witness-submission problem. [NUFORC]nuforc.orgOpen source on nuforc.org.

These records should not be discarded, but they should be used carefully. They show that DRC-labelled sightings circulate in international databases, yet they also illustrate why database entries require location checking, report-date comparison, and independent corroboration before they are treated as national evidence.

Region-level variation: why the cases cluster where records do

The DRC’s UFO record is not evenly distributed across the country. The best-known cases cluster around places where reporting systems, state interest, or foreign attention existed: Elizabethville/Lubumbashi because of uranium and colonial-era intelligence interest; Kerekere because a recovered fragment entered US intelligence channels; Kinshasa because local media, government offices, and witnesses were nearby; and Bas-Uele because a modern technology platform descended with visible hardware and then attracted Reuters coverage. Reuters [Gralien Report]gralienreport.comSource details in endnotes. [JASON COLAVITO]jasoncolavito.comthe 1965 congo ufo crashthe 1965 congo ufo crash

This does not mean other provinces have no unusual aerial experiences. It means that searchable cases require a reporting pathway. Remote forest, mining, riverine, and conflict-affected areas may produce sightings that never reach durable archives. Conversely, areas with aircraft, drones, satellites, balloons, mining operations, and security forces may produce more misidentifications simply because there is more unusual hardware in the sky or falling from it.

Eastern DRC also has a modern complication that older UFO catalogues rarely address: conflict-related aviation, drones, and electronic disruption. Reuters reported in 2024 that the Congolese government accused M23 rebels and Rwanda of disrupting local air traffic in North Kivu through false navigation signals, and in 2026 Reuters reported an AFC/M23 claim of responsibility for a drone attack on Kisangani’s airport. These are not UFO cases, but they are exactly the kind of aviation environment in which unexplained lights, aircraft rumours, or sensor anomalies can be misread without careful corroboration. [Reuters]reuters.comufo in congo jungle turns out to be internet balloon id USKBN25M0B0ufo in congo jungle turns out to be internet balloon id USKBN25M0B0

Confirmed, contested, unresolved, debunked

The most useful way to read the DRC record is by evidence quality rather than excitement.

Confirmed as ordinary or human-made: the 2020 Bas-Uele object was identified as a Loon internet balloon, with a named corporate operator and a coherent technical explanation. The 2021 Kinshasa monolith was not an aerial craft and appears to have been a human installation or prank-like object, not an anomalous flying vehicle. [Reuters]reuters.comOpen source on reuters.com.

Probably terrestrial: the 1965 Kerekere fragment began as an “unidentified flying object” recovery but the exploitation conclusion points to an electrical component made of terrestrial materials. Its Cold War setting makes military or intelligence debris a more credible interpretation than an alien crash. [JASON COLAVITO]jasoncolavito.comthe 1965 congo ufo crashthe 1965 congo ufo crash

Contested historical report: the 1952 Elizabethville uranium-mines case remains notable because of its CIA-file presence and dramatic details, but it lacks the public evidential depth needed for confirmation. It is best treated as a historically significant sighting report, not a solved case and not proof of extraordinary technology. [CIA]cia.govOpen source on cia.gov.

Locally unresolved: the 2012 Kimbanseke object is unresolved in the open public record. It had witnesses, a reported impact site, and local official concern, but no accessible technical identification. That makes it more substantial than a vague light-in-the-sky report, yet still far short of a strong anomalous-material case. [Radio Okapi]radiookapi.netSource details in endnotes.

Democratic Republic of the Congo illustration 3

How to verify future DRC UFO claims

A credible future DRC UFO case would need more than a dramatic description. The strongest evidence would include precise time and coordinates, original photographs or video with metadata, multiple independent witness statements, aircraft and satellite checks, weather and astronomical data, and, for debris cases, a documented chain of custody from recovery to laboratory analysis. Without those pieces, even an honest report can remain permanently ambiguous.

The DRC record shows why this matters. The Bas-Uele case was resolved because the object was recovered and its operator identified. Kerekere weakened as an exotic claim because material analysis pointed to an earthly component. Kimbanseke remains open mainly because the public trail stops before a technical conclusion. Elizabethville remains contested because the intelligence record preserves a story but not a modern-grade evidential package.

For readers following sibling country pages in a wider UFO project, the DRC is best compared with other Central African cases where sparse archives, colonial-era intelligence files, and later internet reposting complicate the record. Its most interesting contribution is not a large number of sightings, but a sharp evidence lesson: in the Congo, as elsewhere, the difference between a mystery, a misidentification, and a credible anomaly depends on what happens after the first strange object is seen.

Amazon book picks

Further Reading

Books and field guides related to What Really Flew Over Congo?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.

Endnotes

  1. Source: cia.gov
    Title: Take a Peek Into Our “X-Files”
    Link: https://www.cia.gov/stories/story/take-a-peek-into-our-x-files

  2. Source: jasoncolavito.com
    Title: the 1965 congo ufo crash
    Link: https://www.jasoncolavito.com/blog/the-1965-congo-ufo-crash

  3. Source: reuters.com
    Title: ‘UFO’ in Congo jungle turns out to be internet balloon | Reuters
    Link: https://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyle/ufo-in-congo-jungle-turns-out-to-be-internet-balloon-idUSKBN25L2GT/

  4. Source: nuforc.org
    Title: Reports by Location
    Link: https://nuforc.org/ndx/?id=loc

  5. Source: science.nasa.gov
    Title: Science Independent Study Team Report
    Link: https://science.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/uap-independent-study-team-final-report.pdf

  6. Source: history.state.gov
    Title: Office of the Historian Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations
    Link: https://history.state.gov/milestones/1961-1968/congo-decolonization

  7. Source: reuters.com
    Title: Silver monolith appears in Congo, prompting suspicion and selfies | Reuters
    Link: https://www.reuters.com/article/world/silver-monolith-appears-in-congo-prompting-suspicion-and-selfies-idUSKBN2AI0RL/

  8. Source: nuforc.org
    Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=183324

  9. Source: nuforc.org
    Link: https://nuforc.org/sighting/?id=186327

  10. Source: reuters.com
    Title: DR Congo government says M23 rebels, Rwanda disrupting local air traffic
    Link: https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/dr-congo-government-says-m23-rebels-rwanda-disrupting-local-air-traffic-2024-07-29/

  11. Source: reuters.com
    Link: https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/congo-rebel-leader-claims-responsibility-drone-attack-strategic-northeast-city-2026-02-03/
    Source snippet

    This announcement follows a recent agreement in Doha between the Congolese government and AFC/M23, mediated by Qatar, to deploy U.N. ceas...

  12. Source: cia.gov
    Link: https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/DOC_0000015463.pdf

  13. Source: reuters.com
    Title: ufo in congo jungle turns out to be internet balloon id USKBN25M0B0
    Link: https://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyle/ufo-in-congo-jungle-turns-out-to-be-internet-balloon-idUSKBN25M0B0/

  14. Source: reuters.com
    Link: https://www.reuters.com/video/watch/idRW333425052026RP1/

  15. Source: history.state.gov
    Link: https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1964-68v23/d1

  16. Source: science.nasa.gov
    Link: https://science.nasa.gov/uap/

  17. Source: science.nasa.gov
    Link: https://science.nasa.gov/uap/faqs/

  18. Source: nasa.gov
    Title: nasa to release discuss unidentified anomalous phenomena report
    Link: https://www.nasa.gov/news-release/nasa-to-release-discuss-unidentified-anomalous-phenomena-report/

  19. Source: archive.org
    Title: Brad Sparks Comprehensive Catalog of 1,600 Project Blue Book UFO Unknowns
    Link: https://archive.org/download/BernardSieglerTechnicsAndTime1TheFaultOfEpimetheus/Brad%20Sparks%20-%20Comprehensive%20Catalog%20of%201%2C600%20Project%20Blue%20Book%20UFO%20Unknowns.pdf

  20. Source: war.gov
    Title: dr jon kosloski director aaro media roundtable on the fy24 consolidated annual
    Link: https://www.war.gov/News/Transcripts/Transcript/Article/3965734/dr-jon-kosloski-director-aaro-media-roundtable-on-the-fy24-consolidated-annual/

  21. Source: war.gov
    Title: dod examining unidentified anomalous phenomena
    Link: https://www.war.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/3965403/dod-examining-unidentified-anomalous-phenomena/

  22. Source: gralienreport.com
    Link: https://www.gralienreport.com/ufos/flying-discs-over-the-congo-an-intriguing-ufo-report-from-the-cias-files/

  23. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite/2012/06/13/kinshasa-engin-venu-du-ciel-tombe-dans-une-parcelle-kimbanseke

  24. Source: m.facebook.com
    Link: https://m.facebook.com/radiookapi/posts/249472685154608?_rdr=&locale=pt_BR

  25. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?escaped_fragment=slide&page=2093

  26. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?i=76&page=8320&word_tag=d%C3%A9plac%C3%A9s%3Fi%3D76%3Fi%3D76

  27. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?amp%3Bpage=1357&page=2127&page%3D3%3Fpage%3D3=

  28. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?amp=&page=2148

  29. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?mdrv=www.radiookapi.net&page=8232

  30. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?nscheck=X4POuSLf2RdfwwdikvaGgg%3D%3D&nstoken=7SOY%2FFbMog3%2FTQb%2FaowYxOtPQJrl4HQAOn6WitLtnucHkThOMV%2F+f9OfldJ1%2F3qCjku65ti7d6JEovo4DhHTxPCJYo1BvzD6NNJRaaySShgXmcPzXbjxNhrEdVQlYw33W7imvhdK938SHkKqomoYCmcJCZMDWqW1EmtIuD%2Fo95sL%2Fshratpck5BthMppSNbYxQg6k2wAKQKN0ENI+E8naPGlKrdr9mcheUMJ5lJNGjf7B2XWhR1KzKHK5FjgnjJwGfugU0tSZCt%2F6HjP2Mrpb7ahnqVZfrTkXsCngL0IMCanXPL9++0PLuIncAYztozU+SGpyt8FgwqtPYSP3OUcbD1JvsI0%2FcqC4VBIZLG6gBF+S9Cl8H6AD33uj+DNd%2FDDzPnfBpBNF026Cm274Lc2QEcvlpaUwdD4xAe2PpUHyJZSNzDTn5SlkJ40K4b9M4kqsKSkLoo%2FA1GO6vfrewTsJHIKKGzrejs+gQFGrpFZ19q5obBs34QBvt9gz8CrylisuoY+eiiVjEmAAKIwytSsPtxog4cUzkALJ14%3D&page=2097

  31. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?%3Bamp%3Bamp%3Bmdrv=www.radiookapi.net&page=2137

  32. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?nstoken=7SOY%2FFbMog3%2FTQb%2FaowYxOtPQJrl4HQAOn6WitLtnucHkThOMV%2F+f9OfldJ1%2F3qCjku65ti7d6JEovo4DhHTxPCJYo1BvzD6NNJRaaySShgXmcPzXbjxNhrEdVQlYw33W7imvhdK938SHkKqomoYCmcJCZMDWqW1EmtIuD%2Fo95sL%2Fshratpck5BthMppSNbYxQg6k2wAKQKN0ENI+E8naPGlKrdr9mcheUMJ5lJNGjf7B2XWhR1KzKHK5FjgnjJwGfugU0tSZCt%2F6HjP2Mrpb7ahnqVZfrTkXsCngL0IMCanXPL9++0PLuIncAYztozU+SGpyt8FgwqtPYSP3OUcbD1JvsI0%2FcqC4VBIZLG6gBF+S9Cl8H6AD33uj+DNd%2FDDzPnfBpBNF026Cm274Lc2QEcvlpaUwdD4xAe2PpUHyJZSNzDTn5SlkJ40K4b9M4kqsKSkL&page=2096

  33. Source: radiookapi.net
    Title: journal francais soir 2053
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/emissions-2/journal-francais/2012/06/13/journal-francais-soir-2053

  34. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?page=8222&word_tag=FDLR%3Fpage%3D10254

  35. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?amp%3Bnstoken=%27nvOpzp%3B+AND%3D1+OR+%28%3C%27%22%3EiKO%29%29%2C&amp%3Bpage=1&nscheck=%27nvOpzp%3B+AND%3D1+OR+%28%3C%27%22%3EiKO%29%29%2C&page=2131

  36. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?page=8218&wb48617274=E228BE03%3Fpage%3D10206%3Fpage%3D10230%3Fpage%3D10231%3Fpage%3D10231

  37. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?page=8282&page%3D2%3Fpage%3D2=

  38. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?height=100%25%27&iframe=true&page=8358&width=100%25

  39. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?%3Bpage=1&amp%3Bmdrv=www.radiookapi.net&page=2125

  40. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?%3Bpage=2%3F%3Bpage%3D2&page=2142

  41. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?i=76&page=8319&word_tag=d%C3%A9plac%C3%A9s%3Fi%3D76%3Fi%3D76%3Fi%3D76

  42. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/actualite?ei=cx4yvnqxf4phywob24cida&page=8347&sa=u%27a%3D0&usg=afqjcnhomdx2xaxkov4tfphgcrmn3tldcg&ved=0ccqqfjac

  43. Source: radiookapi.net
    Link: https://www.radiookapi.net/societe?amp%3Bpage=1%2F%3Famp%3Bpage%3D1%2F&page=2100

  44. Source: Wikipedia
    Title: Congo Crisis
    Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congo_Crisis

  45. Source: taipeitimes.com
    Link: https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/world/archives/2020/08/27/2003742383

Additional References

  1. Source: youtube.com
    Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q8pymWSKAPQ
    Source snippet

    The UFO Incident That Shocked Ariel School: Telepathic Extraterrestrials (Re-Edit)...

  2. Source: youtube.com
    Title: The Story of Children in Zimbabwe Encountering a UFO
    Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TukvVnadRic
    Source snippet

    UFO sighting Africa documentary Children talk about witnessing the 1994 UFO landing at the Ariel School in Ruwa, Zimbabwe Eyes On Cinema...

  3. Source: youtube.com
    Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8L6M2mRcux4
    Source snippet

    The Most Convincing UFO Story From South Africa: The Kalahari Event...

  4. Source: youtube.com
    Title: Landing of Project Loon balloon LN-166 in Congo
    Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qVBeNuwyCHw
    Source snippet

    Children talk about witnessing the 1994 UFO landing at the Ariel School in Ruwa, Zimbabwe...

  5. Source: youtube.com
    Title: The Most Convincing UFO Story From South Africa: The Kalahari Event
    Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LFswmAii4rw
    Source snippet

    The Story of Children in Zimbabwe Encountering a UFO...

  6. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/DPDGxYkkVnK/

  7. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/DV1K7ccDDeb/

  8. Source: devdiscourse.com
    Link: https://www.devdiscourse.com/article/headlines/1184798-2-buses-collide-near-lucknow-6-including-bus-driver-dead-8-injured?amp=

  9. Source: instagram.com
    Link: https://www.instagram.com/p/DWRZ-PzjC-C/

  10. Source: facebook.com
    Link: https://www.facebook.com/wired/posts/new-a-report-released-today-by-nasas-independent-study-team-describes-how-the-ag/695732782422317/

Topic Tree

Follow this branch

Related pages 192

More on this topic 4