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IT'S THERE: This photo taken by James Dungil shows the UFO (arrow) as seen from Tuaran Beach Resort on Saturday.
The round blue object, which was said to be hovering in the sky near the Tuaran Beach Resort, was sighted by resort guests and employees.
Tuaran Beach Resort restaurant manager, James Dungil, 27, who were among the eyewitnesses said the object was sighted on Saturday around 4pm.
“I was in the restaurant with some friends and saw some guests pointing up to the sky.
“We were curious so we went out to see what the commotion was all about and I saw a round transparent object in the sky,” he said when contacted yesterday.
James said he and some others then ran up to the resort’s family living room, located on the second floor, to have a better view.
“I managed to take one photo before it disappeared out of sight,” he said, adding that there was no sound or shining light when the object vanished.
Several other guests and employees, who claimed to have also spotted the object, said it hovered in the air for a few minutes before disappearing.
Some even claimed that their handphones “went dead” when they tried to record the object with the devices.
Another witness, Donny Benedict, 29, said he did not believe in the existence of UFOs, but changed his mind upon watching the unusual sight.
“I saw the object for about 20 seconds before it disappeared.
“It’s strange that it did not make any noise like a normal aircraft,” he said, adding that he regretted not being able to take a picture of the object with his handphone as it was out of battery.
Claims of UFO sighting were also made in Hangzhou, China on July 7, forcing an airport to cease operations for one hour.
A flight crew preparing for descend first detected the object around 8.40pm and notified the air traffic control department.
Aviation authorities responded within minutes, grounding outbound flights and diverting inbound ones to airports in Ningbo and Wuxi.
Eighteen flights were affected. Though normal operations resumed an hour later, the incident captured the attention of the Chinese media and sparked a firestorm of speculation on the UFO’s identity.
Internet users claimed that the object was a US bomber flying towards China but it was neither a US missile nor a Russian satellite.
Some even suggested that the Chinese military was responsible for the UFO; a new missile or aircraft being tested out. LINK

By introducing clusters of magnetic nanoparticles into the cell membranes of tiny worms, researchers then showed they could control the worms' movements.
A video of the worms shows them crawling around, before researchers turn on a magnetic field which heated the nanoparticles up, forcing the worms to change direction.
"We could use this method to make them go back and forth," assistant professor of physics Arnd Pralle said.
"Now we need to find out which other behaviours can be controlled this way."
Prof Pralle said the worms reacted once the nanoparticle temperatures reached 34C, which is nature's own threshold for provoking an avoidance response.
In a paper published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, he said staff developed a tool to heat the nanoparticles in the cell membrane only, as heating the cell itself would kill it.
Being able to heat it to an exact temperature was also due to the researchers' development of a "nanoscale thermometer" using fluorescent light.
He said the next step was to adapt the technology to a "whole animal" approach, which could lead to "innovative new pharmaceuticals".
However, the university's research has drawn comment from detractors claiming it's a dangerous step towards giving "nanobots" the capacity to control the minds of humans.
Prof Pralle says the true value in the findings lay in its potential to manipulate specific cells, which could lead to innovative new cancer treatment techniques or diabetes therapies.
The nanoparticles could be sent to target and kill specific cells, or used to control insulin release.
Wired.com posed the question as to where the nanoparticles could used on the human body to control it in a similar way to the worms.
It claims the same recoil response was evident in fingers, causing them to "jump back when we touch something too hot".
"But little is known about other places where this happens in the body," it said.





BEIJING, July 8 (Xinhaunet) -- The unidentified flying object that disrupted air traffic in Hangzhou for an hour on Wednesday remains, well, unidentified.
"No conclusion has yet been drawn," Wang Jian, head of air traffic control with the Zhejiang branch of the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC), was quoted by Xinhua News Agency as saying.
Some media have speculated the UFO might be a private aircraft, based on the increasing number of privately-owned aircraft in Zhejiang province.
But Wang said the possibility it was a private plane was "just a guess."
A source with knowledge of the matter, however, told China Daily earlier that the object had a military connection.
A staff member at Xiaoshan Airport in Hangzhou said a twinkling object was first spotted over the city's sky around 8:30 pm on Wednesday. However, the object did not show up on the airport's radar.
Xiaoshan Airport was then closed at 8:45 pm over security concerns, and only resumed operation at 9:41 pm.
A dozen inbound flights were diverted to nearby airports and six outbound flights were delayed for three to four hours.
According to an estimate by Shanghai-based Evening News, more than 2,000 passengers were affected.
It was the first time an airport in China has been shut down on such short notice due to a UFO, said a staff member with the CAAC of East China, who declined to be named.
"We should first find out how the owner got the approval to fly the object," said the staff member, adding "even a fire balloon needs to get the authority's permission before lifting off."
The twinkling object could have been a light below the horizon reflecting on an airplane flying very high, given good visibility in the sky, said Zhu Dayi, who works at the Shanghai Observatory, adding such phenomena usually happen around an hour after sunset.
"If the speed of the twinkling object is extremely high, it could be a military aircraft," he said, "But no conclusion can be drawn now, as the information is limited."
According to airport staff, it is still not clear which authorities should be held responsible for dereliction of duty - if there were any. The CAAC of East China and the airport divide their areas of responsibilities according to the craft's altitude.
As to who should pay for losses to the airline companies whose flights were diverted, an industry insider said those costs should be borne by the owner of the unidentified object.