The controversial UFO researcher who spoke at the event claimed that individuals did not originate from terrestrial evolution.
On Tuesday, Mexico’s Congress held the country’s first public hearing on unidentified anomalous phenomena, also known as UFOs.
The mummified bodies of two miniature alleged humanoids were presented at the special event. They were arranged in glazed boxes.
Politicians were told that the mummies were found in mines in Cusco, Peru.
Presented by a controversial ufologist
The heard voice was a Mexican journalist and a self-taught UFO researcher Jaime Maussan. According to him, the remains belonged to “non-humans”.
Maussan has previously made claims in public that have not been true.
Both miniature figures had only three fingers on their hands and elongated heads. Maussan said Newsweek magazine according to which the bodies are about a thousand years old.
The ufologist said, according to The Independent, that these individuals do not come from extraterrestrial evolution.
According to Maussan, based on an analysis by researchers at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, the mummies’ DNA did not come from humans.
X-ray images taken of the mummies were also presented at the hearing.
Maussan said that the other one seemed to have “eggs” inside, he says Sky News.
The ufologist previously made false claims
Jaime Maussan’s claims to the Mexican Congress have not been proven to be true.
He has previously been linked to claims about “alien discoveries”, which have been refuted as untrue, such as the discovery of five mummies in Peru in 2017. They were proven to be the remains of human children, says The Independent.
The purpose of the Mexican congressional hearing was to help pass a new law protecting the airspace.
With the law, Mexico would become the first country in the world to recognize the presence of aliens on planet Earth, according to local media, according to the Reuters news agency.
Do you believe in extraterrestrial life? You can discuss the topic until Thursday, September 14 at 11 p.m.
Source: Reuters