The
BBC's correspondent in Zimbabwe, Tim Leach, visited the school on 19 September to film interviews with pupils and staff. After investigating this incident, Leach stated "I could handle war zones, but I could not handle this". Hind visited the school on 20 September 1994. She interviewed some of the children and asked them to draw pictures of what they had seen. She reported that the children all told her the same story. That November,
Harvard University professor of psychiatry
John Mack visited the Ariel school to interview witnesses. Throughout the 1990s, Mack had investigated UFO sightings and the
alien abduction phenomenon. According to the interviews of Hind, Leach and Mack, 62 children between the ages of six and twelve said that they had seen at least one UFO. One or more silver objects, usually described as discs, appeared in the sky. They then floated down to a field of brush and small trees just outside school property. Between one and four creatures with big eyes and dressed all in black, exited a craft and approached the children. At this point, many of the children ran but some, mostly older pupils, stayed and watched the approach. According to Mack's interviews, the creature or creatures then telepathically communicated to the children an environmental message, before returning to the craft and flying away. According to Dunning, this telepathic message aspect of the story was not included in Hind or Leach's reports, only Mack's, although Hind reported it later. In Mack's interviews, one fifth-grader tells how he was warned "about something that's going to happen," and that "
pollution mustn't be". An eleven-year-old girl told Mack "I think they want people to know that we're actually making harm on this world and we mustn’t get too techno." One child said that he was told that the world would end because they are not taking care of the planet. The children were adamant that they had not seen a
plane. Hind noted that the different cultural background of the children gave rise to different interpretations of what they had seen and they did not all believe that they had seen
extraterrestrials. She noted that some of the children thought the short little beings were
tikoloshes, creatures of
Shona and
Ndebele folklore. ==Aftermath==