In June 1996, the American magazine "Fate" informed its readers about the incredible battle being played out in the skies of East Africa.
“I have never seen anything like this in my adventurous life,” recalled a retired German Air Force colonel Kurt Formann who had moved to Africa. - One squad of UFOs consisted of three machines in the form of upturned soup bowls, fifty meters in diameter. Another, opposing, group consisted of saucer-shaped, disc-shaped starships, reaching no more than thirty meters in diameter, black with bright rims around the perimeter. The bottoms of these vehicles rotated at a breakneck speed.
These fantastic flying machines with incredible sounds rushed across the cloudless sky, firing bright red rays at each other. Finally, four of the seven warring UFOs were destroyed and instantly burned to the ground, falling to the ground. The remaining two - one from each group - flew in different directions."
The battle of the fantastic aircraft lasted over an hour and was watched by several hundred residents of the Rift Valley settlement, Kenya. The battle was also recorded by radars in Cairo, but the "mad" marks on the radar monitors were interpreted as a meteor shower.
On December 30, 1999, something similar happened directly over the Tanzanian city of Kigamo. Before the sun went down, three huge black triangles at a height of about a kilometer furiously hunted for five "soup bowls". The latter, half the size, significantly exceeded triangular vehicles in speed and maneuverability. For forty minutes, unknown creatures fired at each other with blue beams ("triangles") and red pulses ("plates"). The cars hit by bright torches fell outside the city and burned out in the jungle. Finally, the three "saucers" drove the "triangle" northward, and the events ended there. And this time thousands of people watched the air battle.
“So what is it that UFOs have not shared in the skies of Africa? - asks the famous magazine "Efrik Zhen". "Modern filmmakers, science fiction specialists and super special effects never dreamed of such aircraft and those terrible types of weapons that people watched with fear and horror in the evening sky of Tanzania."
Alexander Evteev, "Interesting Newspaper"