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Voronezh Park Landing

Sep 27, 1989

Voronezh, Russia

Cold War
  • DateSep 27, 1989
  • LocationVoronezh, Russia
  • Witnesses40
  • ShapeSphere
  • Credibility★★☆☆☆
Same eraCold War
  1. 1989Belgian UFO Wave — Eupen & Liège, 1989–1990
  2. 1989Kapustin Yar Arsenal — KGB Dossier Encounter
  3. 1989Voronezh Park Landing
  4. 1989Zaostrovka Aerial Battle — Perm Crash
  5. 1990Greifswald UFO Formation

Credibility Audit

2 factors
  1. Multiple Witnesses+2
  2. Official Report+1
Raw total3
Final tier★☆☆☆☆Anecdotal
Thresholds
  • ★0–3
  • ★★4–7
  • ★★★8–11
  • ★★★★12–16
  • ★★★★★17+

DoD Observables

1 of 5
  • Instantaneous Acceleration
  • Hypersonic Velocity
  • Low Observability
  • Trans-Medium Travel
  • Anti-Gravity Lift

Event Description

Observed Shape
Sphere

Craft morphology

Non-Human Intelligence (NHI)
Observed

On September 27, 1989, children playing football in Voronezh's South Park observed a pink glow in the sky followed by a deep red sphere approximately 3 meters in diameter. The object circled, vanished, and reappeared. Multiple child witnesses — including Vasya Surin, Julia Sholokhova, and Lena Sarokina — described the craft landing, a hatch opening, and three-eyed, bronze-booted figures approximately 3 meters tall emerging. One youth reportedly vanished from sight during the encounter and reappeared after the object departed. The consistency of the children's accounts, gathered independently by journalists and Soviet investigators, was striking — separated children produced nearly identical descriptions of the figures' appearance and movements without opportunity for coordination.

TASS — the official Soviet state news agency — reported the event as factual news on October 9, 1989, under correspondent Nikolai Efimov's byline, triggering front-page coverage across major Western newspapers including The New York Times. For a state-controlled press agency operating under strict editorial standards to publish a UAP landing-and-entity account as straightforward news was without precedent in Soviet media history. The decision implies that responsible Soviet officials either believed the report was genuine or saw political value in its disclosure — neither interpretation diminishes its documentary significance.

Soviet authorities conducted a formal scientific investigation that included 16 radiometric measurements, 19 soil analyses, 9 microorganism tests, and 20 spectro-chemical examinations of the alleged landing site. While the physical analysis found no definitive anomalies confirming a craft had landed, the investigation's thoroughness — ordered at the level of regional Communist Party administration — confirms that Soviet authorities treated the event with institutional seriousness rather than dismissing it as a children's fantasy.

The Voronezh event occurred during the final years of the Soviet Union, when a brief period of glasnost-era openness permitted reporting that would have been suppressed earlier. Its timing, the extraordinary TASS decision to report it, and the systematic official investigation make Voronezh one of the most institutionally documented close-encounter-with-entities cases in Soviet history.

Sources

  1. [1]mediaTASS Official Report — October 9, 1989
  2. [2]mediaTIME Magazine — Aliens Landed in Russia, 1989