TWITTER users claim a chilling voicemail message sent to their phones could have links to missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370, alien life and an impending Doomsday date.

The message features a robotic voice droning out an automated message in NATO's phonetic alphabet.

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Deciphered, it reads: “S Danger SOS it is dire for you to evacuate be caution they are not human 042933964230 SOS Danger SOS.”

But some users claimed the numbers are a set of coordinates which, when plugged into Google Maps, led to one location in Africa and another near Malaysia.

The latter, many users noted, was “very close” to where Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 vanished from radar, leading to speculation the voicemail was a recording of the doomed plane’s encounter with an alien craft.

The post appears to have started with Ty, an ordinatry Twitter user with no apparent prior interest in conspiracy theories.

10 The creepy message appears to have started with Twitter user Ty. This is his profile picture Credit: Twitter

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10 Picture shows one user's notes as they attempt to decipher the code

10 Officers carrying pieces of debris from an unidentified aircraft apparently washed ashore in Saint-Andre de la Reunion, eastern La Reunion island, France, in 2015. The wreckage awakened speculation over flight MH370 Credit: EPA

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On March 13, Ty posted a recording of a voicemail message he received on his phone and asked for help translating it.

In a post retweeted more than 6000 times, user Gio de Loera said: “Are you saying that Malaysia Flight 370 encountered something non-human???”

User Tyelashe responded: “It’s a police code. It says ‘Danger SOS it is dire for you to evacuate. Be cautious they are not human SOS danger SOS”.

Ty also posted unsettling direct messages he had been receiving on his Twitter account, one in Indonesian, another in Malay, a couple in Morse code and one which appeared to be five groupings of numbers: “20.8.5.25 1.18.5 20.1.11.9.14.7 15.22.5.18 41818”.

The Indonesian message, when run through Google translate, turned out to be this warning: “End the post you just shared about the recording in your phone.”

Several users translated the number sequences and Morse code to read: “They are taking over.”

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They also arrived at cryptic lines about the late Stephen Hawkings with one user tweeting: “The message received is well related to Stephen Hawking’s death, you are not ready to face them.”

The numerical sequences allude to April 18 as some kind of day of reckoning, rapture, or the day when “they” were “taking over”.

Disturbingly, a few nights before he started receiving the messages, Ty posted about an odd event in which an unknown man drove by his home and took photographs at 3am using a flash.

He now believes that the man with the camera is linked to the voicemail and the direct messages he received.

Since his post went viral, turning Twitter into a hotbed of paranormal activity and analysis, other equally unsettled users have come forward to say that they too have received the message.

User Basspeare received the same automated voicemail as Ty — except his recording featured a lengthy message about aliens before the voice launches into the NATO phonetic alphabet.

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However, there are indications that the messages are part of an alternate reality, a complex puzzle similar to Cicada 3301, which ran for years before it was reportedly cracked in 2014.

A Twitter account called 914, run by someone with the handle @LunarrRabbits, has a pinned tweet dated March 17 which suggests that might be the case.

It reads: “This Event is no where related to catastrophic events, 18 april is definitely safe, all other accounts are impersonating, reason to hold this event is to help people solve an upcoming global cicada event, reason to hold this event is to aware people with knowledge.”

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