Showing posts with label Deutscher Bundestag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deutscher Bundestag. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel Forced to Release Secret UFO Files

 
 
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Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel Forced to Release Secret UFO Files

By Jon Austin
www.express.co.uk
7-101-15
ALIEN investigators hope the release of German government files on historical UFO sightings will be a milestone in their quest for evidence of extra terrestrial life.
     Following a number of years of legal wrangling, the German Supreme Administrative Court in Leipzig ordered the German Bundestag to release confidential documents about UFOs, that it had tried to keep hidden.

The news has been welcomed by UFO researchers already buoyed by news that the UK Ministry of Defence (MOD) will release 18 confidential UFO files to the National Archive next March, although it is still not known when they will be available to the public.

In 2008 then German Minister of the Interior Dr Wolfgang Schäuble insisted the German government had never investigated the topic and had no interest in doing so.

However, two years later Robert Fleischer of Exopolitic.org discovered that the scientific service of the German parliament had a department investigating the possibility of extraterrestrial intelligence and UFOs.

German blogger Frank Reitemeyer took the Bundestag to court, which fought against the release until now. . . .

Tuesday, July 07, 2015

Heartbreak in the UFO Closet

Heartbreak in the UFO Closet

By Billy Cox
De Void
7-7-15

      Fleet Street is enjoying watching the Ministry of Defence squirm, again, as federal censors attempt, again, to get the UFO monkey off its back. The controversy was officially put to bed in 2013, when the UK’s National Archives dumped the last of the MoD's reports into the public domain. That was it. End of story. No mas. But last week, in a shout-out to “World UFO Day,” The Daily Express crowed “Exclusive: MOD to release UK’s top secret UFO ‘X-Files’ that ‘could prove aliens exist.’”

That’s wishful thinking. But the MoD really should be ashamed of itself for putting Archive historians in such a sticky wicket last year. That's when, in response to a FOIA request concerning retired U.S. airman John Burroughs -- who claims to have suffered permanent injuries from an alleged 1980 UFO encounter at an air base on British soil -- the military admitted it was still sitting on, ahem, 18 relevant documents. That shouldn’t have been terribly surprising, since few if any of the previously published pages from half a century of eyewitness sightings had ever been classified to begin with. In reply to Burroughs' followup, the Defence Secretariat conceded in February 2014 that the files in question were being considered for release “in the near future.”

Last week, 18 months later, Conservative Party House of Lords member Guy Black of Brentwood formally wondered from his Parliament seat just what, exactly, “in the near future” really meant. That forced Defence Minister Earl Howe to promise the military would get said files into the hands of the Archives no later than March of 2016. Then he whacked the ball into another court by adding the Archives “will make the necessary judgement about when they release these files to the public.” So on and on it goes in the UK.

It's sad when a government can't bear to admit the extent of its interest in UFOs. But even more heartbreaking than the UK was what happened last week in Germany. In a showdown that seems almost ludicrous, on June 29, the Federal Administrative Supreme Court felt compelled to order the German Parliament, or Bundestag, to release material on what it’s done to comply with a particular United Nations resolution. On UFOs. From 1978.

Known technically as UN General Assembly Decision A/33/426, that agreement suggested member states should, among other things, “take appropriate steps to coordinate on a national level scientific research and investigation into extraterrestrial life, including unidentified flying objects, and to inform the Secretary-General of the observations, research, and evaluation of such activities.” Which is not, one would think, a huge national priority anywhere.

And yet, since a report on German efforts toward that end was confirmed by Exopolitik.org in 2010, the Bundestag has gone to court to prevent the release of what blogger Andreas Muller states is a mere “informational summary of known facts on UFOs, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), and the UN-Resolution A/33/426.” Although a little clarity gets lost in translation, Muller says it contradicts Germany’s long-standing position that the state has had no interest in The Great Taboo. Muller then links to a 2014 story summarizing 67 pages of previously withheld Cold War UFO documents languishing in files of the BND German intelligence agency. Many are still bound by a 30-year statute of limitations embargo, but available details on the known incidents are lights-in-the-night-sky innocuous.

The aforementioned grenzwissenschaft-aktuell blog goes on to quote Germany's Congressional Scientific Research Service – which reportedly produced the Bundestag’s currently litigated “A33/426” documents – as stating, “The fact that both the United Kingdom as well as France (and several other countries) have been engaged with the question about the existence of UFOs and extraterrestrial live (sic) forms and that they confirmed this interest by publishing their formerly secret files extensively, even online, suggests that also German agencies and federal ministries are engaged with this problem and question.”

Come on, Bundestag. Man up. Say it. We’re interested in UFOs. Just say it. Say it.

Monday, June 29, 2015

German Parliament Forced to Release Official UFO Study

 
 
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Supreme Court Forces German Parliament to Release UFO Study

By www.grenzwissenschaft-aktuell.de
6-28-15

      Leipzig (Deutschland) – After years of law suits, the Federal Administrative Supreme court of Germany forces the administration of the German Parliament – the Bundestag – to release and give public access to an expertise on "UFOs," the search for extraterrestrial intelligences and Germanys implementation UN-Resolution A/33/426″ (that asked its member states to conduct official research into UFOs) compiled by the parliamentary „Scientifical Service“. So far the Bundestag not only denied public access to this document but also fought and intensive and so far successful legal dispute against its publication. The new court sentence is a big step not only for German UFO-research and disclosure but also for the freedom of information in general.


The function „Scientifical Services“ is „to supply the members of parliaments with factual information, analysis and expertise comments of in their political work in the parliament and their constituencies“. Therefore on should assume that those compiled expertise would be open for public access as well. But that was not so until the recent verdict. It was up to the administration of the Bundestag to release them – or to restrict access to it.

In 2010 the German Exopolitic initiative „Exopolitic.org“ lead by Robert Fleischer learnt of an expertise by the service on „UFOs, the search for extraterrestrial intelligences and Germanys implementation UN-Resolution A/33/426″, that suggested to its member states to conduct official research into UFOs. While several journalists got hold of copies the paper, it was not legal to publish it in its full content. Frank Reitemeyer then asked to view the expertise but his access was denied by the administration of the Bundestag – so he went to court. When he was granted that permission in the first juristically instance, the Bundestag administration successfully appealed on points of law. Since then the lawsuit went through all instances and the Bundestag administration even asked a renowned a big law firm to compile a legal opinion (which under normal conditions costs about 50.000 Euro, as some legal experts estimate).

While the latest and final decisions by the supreme administrative court (Bundesverfassungsgericht) is a big step for the freedom of information, the now released „UFO expertise“ by its Scientifical Service should not be confused with secret UFO-files of research and investigation into UFOs by official German offices, ministries or even the military. It is an informational summary of known facts on UFOs . . ..

Saturday, June 27, 2015

Germany`s Supreme Court Orders Release of UFO Study

Germany`s Supreme Court Orders Release of UFO Study

FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT :Bundestag will issue UFO documents

By Werner Pluta
www.golem.de
6-26-15


What does the Bundestag have on extraterrestrial life?
It must now disclose - as any other documents that its service created.

    Are there any flying saucers in Germany? Good Question. After all, the scientific services of the Bundestag has dealt with the subject - and has to make its findings available to the public. That the Federal Administrative Court (Bundesverwaltungsgericht) in Leipzig decided.

The court ruled on June 25, 2015 , the Bundestag is an information requiring authority. Therefore applies the Freedom of Information Act, which grants citizens the right of access to official information. The creation of documents by a service of the Bundestag is therefore an administrative act. In this respect there was a claim for access to documents that started the scientific services and language services. The Federal Administrative Court therefore annulled decisions of the Bundestag and the Higher Administrative Court in Berlin. . . .