Ustica massacre, 42 years later: Was it the aliens?

Not even the declassification of the documents on the massacres wanted by the Renzi government has brought new details. “That night he is absent from the public administration papers. There is nothing from the 1980s and later years. There is nothing in the transport ministry which instead is what immediately appoints a commission to ascertain what happened. The appraisals are from 1982 and then there is nothing else »explained Daria Bonfietti to Vanity Fair.

If over the years it has been reconstructed what happened that night in the Italian skies, it is not as clear which forces were in play in the one that the judge Rosary Prior he called an air war. It was the night of June 27, 1980.

The scheduled flight IH870, departed from Bologna and bound for Palermo was operated by the DC-9 I-TIGI aircraft (the latter will return to the show dedicated to Ustica by Marco Paolini) of the airline Itavia. On board there were 81 people including passengers and crew members, who had waited over two hours to leave. The plane exploded in flight and fell into the Tyrrhenian Sea in the waters between the islands of Ponza and Ustica. The last contact with the Rome-Ciampino airport, which was responsible for that section of the Ambra 13 airway, is at 8:59 pm 5 minutes passed, but from the flight no one answered the call for authorization to start descent on Palermo. Hence the attempts of contact by the control towers of Rome and Palermo and also of two flights on the same route. No reply.

The rescue operations started at 9:25 pm directed by the Air Rescue Command of Martina Franca. From Ciampino at 9.55pm the helicopters took off to patrol the area of ​​the probable accident. The plane was reported missing. Only the next morning did a rescue helicopter identify some debris on the surface about 110 km north of Ustica. Then the other parts of the plane and the bodies of the passengers arrive. Only 38 bodies were found.

Source: Vanity Fair

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