Mexican Congress Holds Second Hearing on Controversial Claims about 'Non-Human Beings' in Peru
"Non-human beings" presented as evidence are real living organisms but their extraterrestrial origin remains uncertain, stirring international controversy and skepticism over the credibility of the findings.
- Mexican journalist Jaime Maussan and his Peruvian medical team claimed to have found 'non-human beings' in Peru, causing controversy in their second hearing in Mexico's Congress.
- Maussan displayed the alleged Peruvian mummies in September, stating they were 'not part of our terrestrial evolution', a claim met with international skepticism and labeled a stunt by some scientists and lawmakers.
- This controversy follows similar claims by Maussan in Peru in 2017, which were debunked by a Peruvian prosecutor's report identifying the bodies as 'recently manufactured dolls' covered with paper and synthetic glue.
- The current hearing focused on proving the authenticity of the specimens, with several doctors arguing they were those of real, once-living organisms, but their origin remained uncertain.
- Anthropologist Roger Zuniga presented supporting evidence from additional researchers, asserting the specimens were real and there had been 'no human intervention in their formation'.
- While Maussan maintained the possibility of the specimens being evidence of non-Earthly life forms, the presenting researchers expressly stated their findings did not imply that the bodies were extraterrestrial.