
The bodies of two extraterrestrial beings were unveiled at a hearing in Mexico’s Congress, marking the first time the issue has been publicly raised in the country.
The remains of two alleged extraterrestrial bodies were unveiled at a hearing in Mexico’s Congress, marking the first time the issue has been publicly addressed in the country.
On Wednesday, the figures were displayed in two small sarcophagi in the San Lazaro Palace, the seat of the legislative body, in an event that continues to stir surprise and ridicule in Mexico.
Jaime Mausan, a Mexican communicator who promoted the exhibition, said the remains, which were gray in color but similar in morphology to humans, were discovered in 2017 between the Peruvian towns of Palpa and Nazca.
“They are not part of our earthly evolution,” Morsan said during a meeting convened by official deputy Sergio Gutierrez, who defended the law as a “public good.”
Morsan, who has been uncovering the possibility of extraterrestrial phenomena for years, cited carbon-14 analysis from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), which shows that “these entities are about 1,000 years old.” .
The same journalist also shared a video of an alleged sighting of an unidentified flying object.
In an effort to lend credibility to their statements, lawmakers made Morsan and other speakers swear to tell the truth in the first public hearings sponsored by Mexico’s public institutions.
Gutierrez spoke to a U.S. Congressional committee on July 26 after David Glash, a former U.S. intelligence official, said humans were not alone in space and that authorities were hiding evidence. He explained that this session was requested by journalists.
In May, NASA held its first public meeting on the issue, calling for stricter scientific controls to uncover the origins of hundreds of unidentified anomalous phenomena (UNIFs).
Officials from the National Institute for Information Access and Personal Data Protection (INAI) revealed during the hearing that Mexican authorities have received 1,011 requests for information from citizens regarding this matter since 2003. Ta.
On social networks, the display of what appeared to be an alien drew many surprised comments, but also a photo of a character from the movie ET, along with some ridicule.
“I believe everything about Jaime Morsan,” one user wrote on X (formerly Twitter). “Bringing Jaime Morsun to the House of Representatives shows a disdain for science in this country,” said another.
Inside, they reproduced a video of the event with the phrase “The Martians have Arrived,” the title of a popular Cha Cha Cha song performed by Puerto Rican Tito Rodriguez, and called the Mausans “President of Intergalactic Relations.” Some even called for it to become “.
Source: Diario.Elmundo
