The body of Polish President Lech Kaczynski is to lie in state in the capital Warsaw as the nation mourns the victims of the Smolensk air crash.
He and 95 others, including many top defence officials and public figures, died when their jet crashed en route to a war memorial service in Russia.
Russia is also marking a day of mourning, as relatives arrive in Moscow to try to identify the bodies of the victims.
Duncan Kennedy reports.
Source:BBC
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Showing posts with label Polish president' kills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Polish president' kills. Show all posts
Monday, April 12, 2010
Poland Mourns Death of Leaders, But Life Goes On
Poland is preparing for state funerals for President Lech Kaczynski and his wife, and is awaiting the repatriation of the bodies of many of its political and military elite - all killed in a plane crash in western Russia on Saturday. Many Poles are slowly coming to grips with this tragedy.
More vigils and tributes - hundreds of people crowded into the Church of Saint Anna in central Warsaw for a special mass for those killed in the crash.
Many mourners young people, mostly students who earlier had marched silently through the city carrying Polish flags and pictures of the President and his wife.
This young woman, Katherine, says she came in tribute to the country's leaders and because the rector of her university was among those killed.
Nearly 100 people were aboard the flight from Warsaw to the western Russian city of Smolensk. The plane crashed as it tried to land amid heavy fog, killing all onboard - President Lech Kaczynski, his wife Maria and a delegation that included Poland's top military leaders as well as many political and cultural figures.
They were on their way to attend a memorial service to commemorate the murder of some 22,000 Polish military officers and civilians who were massacred by the Soviet Union's secret police during World War II.
Jacek Kucharczyk is President of the Institute of Public Affairs in Warsaw. He says Saturday's plane crash has shocked the nation, but that it has not sparked a political crisis.
"I think that the reaction to this disaster was very quiet and peaceful, and people wanted to mourn the dead above their political views and how they evaluated the President and his party," said Jacek Kucharczyk. "There didn't seem to be any sense that the country is in a fragile situation that institutions aren't working."
As the Polish Constitution mandates, the speaker of parliament has taken on the role of interim president and new elections are to be scheduled within the next 2.5 months.
Meanwhile life is slowly returning to normal. Shops are open; people are at work. But many Poles are also asking questions such as why so many of the country's political leaders were traveling on one plane and why, if as Russian authorities say, the pilot ignored warnings against trying to land in poor weather conditions.
But for now many Poles are seeking comfort in candlelight vigils and in church services.
Source: voanews.com/
More vigils and tributes - hundreds of people crowded into the Church of Saint Anna in central Warsaw for a special mass for those killed in the crash.
Many mourners young people, mostly students who earlier had marched silently through the city carrying Polish flags and pictures of the President and his wife.
This young woman, Katherine, says she came in tribute to the country's leaders and because the rector of her university was among those killed.
Nearly 100 people were aboard the flight from Warsaw to the western Russian city of Smolensk. The plane crashed as it tried to land amid heavy fog, killing all onboard - President Lech Kaczynski, his wife Maria and a delegation that included Poland's top military leaders as well as many political and cultural figures.
They were on their way to attend a memorial service to commemorate the murder of some 22,000 Polish military officers and civilians who were massacred by the Soviet Union's secret police during World War II.
Jacek Kucharczyk is President of the Institute of Public Affairs in Warsaw. He says Saturday's plane crash has shocked the nation, but that it has not sparked a political crisis.
"I think that the reaction to this disaster was very quiet and peaceful, and people wanted to mourn the dead above their political views and how they evaluated the President and his party," said Jacek Kucharczyk. "There didn't seem to be any sense that the country is in a fragile situation that institutions aren't working."
As the Polish Constitution mandates, the speaker of parliament has taken on the role of interim president and new elections are to be scheduled within the next 2.5 months.
Meanwhile life is slowly returning to normal. Shops are open; people are at work. But many Poles are also asking questions such as why so many of the country's political leaders were traveling on one plane and why, if as Russian authorities say, the pilot ignored warnings against trying to land in poor weather conditions.
But for now many Poles are seeking comfort in candlelight vigils and in church services.
Source: voanews.com/
Poland mourns air-crash victims
Madam, – I am an Irishman currently in Poland. I arrived last Thursday to visit some of the many friends I had made while living here for 18 months from January 2008 until July last year. When the news of the plane crash, which claimed the lives of so many of Poland’s leading politicians, came through on the radio, I was on a bus heading to Nowy Sacz, a small city in the south of the country. From my time spent in this amazing country, I can see and feel the immense sense of loss that the Polish people are feeling.
On Saturday, I could see the shock in the faces of people in the city. On Sunday, it felt as if the country was numbed.
The disbelief that this could happen was evident everywhere. That this disaster should happen on the day that the country was to commemorate those Poles massacred in Katyn during the second World War, makes it even more poignant. The name Katyn continues to haunt Poland.
Having lived and worked with Polish people in Ireland and in Poland, I know that while this is a setback the Polish people have a strong heart, and will bounce back strongly from this event. I would like to offer my deepest condolences to those Poles here and abroad. – Yours, etc,
GREG MAITLAND,
St Ives Gardens, Belfast.
Madam, – While the Polish state rightly mourns the death of President Lech Kaczynski with due deference to the protocols and traditions associated with the death of a head of state, I’m a little surprised that some politicians have been so gushing in their comments.
He was a hard-nosed extreme right wing conservative, with a questionable human rights record and was an outspoken homophobe. While being hosted as a guest of this nation in 2007, he said giving homosexuals equal rights would threaten the existence of the human race. He also banned gay rights protests in Poland. Give him whatever respect his office deserves, but don’t make him out to be something he wasn’t. – Yours, etc,
DAVID WILKINS,
Putland Villas,
Vevay Road,
Bray,
Co Wicklow.
Source:
On Saturday, I could see the shock in the faces of people in the city. On Sunday, it felt as if the country was numbed.
The disbelief that this could happen was evident everywhere. That this disaster should happen on the day that the country was to commemorate those Poles massacred in Katyn during the second World War, makes it even more poignant. The name Katyn continues to haunt Poland.
Having lived and worked with Polish people in Ireland and in Poland, I know that while this is a setback the Polish people have a strong heart, and will bounce back strongly from this event. I would like to offer my deepest condolences to those Poles here and abroad. – Yours, etc,
GREG MAITLAND,
St Ives Gardens, Belfast.
Madam, – While the Polish state rightly mourns the death of President Lech Kaczynski with due deference to the protocols and traditions associated with the death of a head of state, I’m a little surprised that some politicians have been so gushing in their comments.
He was a hard-nosed extreme right wing conservative, with a questionable human rights record and was an outspoken homophobe. While being hosted as a guest of this nation in 2007, he said giving homosexuals equal rights would threaten the existence of the human race. He also banned gay rights protests in Poland. Give him whatever respect his office deserves, but don’t make him out to be something he wasn’t. – Yours, etc,
DAVID WILKINS,
Putland Villas,
Vevay Road,
Bray,
Co Wicklow.
Source:
Poland Ready to Resume Zloty Interventions Under New Governor
April 13 (Bloomberg) -- Poland’s next central bank governor must stick to a policy of curbing gains in the European Union’s best performing currency this year and raising interest rates to contain inflation, Stone Harbor and TCW Group Inc. said.
“We have to see who gets nominated, but at this period we’re neutral, we’re not trading at all on our Polish position,” said Pablo Cisilino, who manages a $12.5 billion emerging-markets, fixed-income portfolio for Stone Harbor Investment Partners in New York. “We expect policy continuity.”
Bank governor Slawomir Skrzypek died in an April 10 plane crash, which also killed the president, and his successor has yet to be named. The tragedy occurred a day after the central bank started selling zloty in a bid to contain this year’s 6 percent appreciation against the euro, the bank’s first intervention in 12 years. The currency’s gains are hurting exporters in the biggest of the EU’s eastern members and the only EU economy to have avoided a contraction during the credit crisis.
The zloty is rising “too far and too fast” for the bank to ignore the issue and “there’s no reason to believe they won’t come back into the market again next week or the week after,” said Blaise Antin, managing director at TCW Group Inc. in Los Angeles, who helps oversee $115 billion, including $4 billion in emerging market assets, in an interview yesterday.
‘Out of the Way’
Before Skrzypek’s death, the central bank had signaled it was deciding when to start raising interest rates from a record low 3.5 percent. The bank has cut the benchmark in six steps from 6 percent over the past year and a half.
“Uncertainty should be out of the way by June,” after a permanent governor is appointed, “and we stick for now with our call of three rate hikes from July, but with risks to the downside given prospects of further intervention,” said Peter Attard Montalto, an emerging markets economist at Nomura International Plc, in a note.
The bank will raise the benchmark interest rate to 4 percent by year-end, according to the median forecast of 11 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
Inflation slowed to 2.6 percent in March from 2.9 percent the previous month. The bank estimates price growth may slow to 1.4 percent by the third quarter, below its 2.5 percent target, though accelerating economic growth may push up consumer prices by year- end. Gross domestic product will rise 3 percent in 2010 after growing 1.7 percent last year, the government estimates.
Attard Montalto expects the country to join the Exchange Rate Mechanism, a prelude to adopting the euro, in 2011.
Appointment
The central bank governor is appointed by the president and must be approved by a simple majority of lawmakers. As acting president, Bronislaw Komorowski, who is also the official presidential candidate of Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s ruling Civic Platform party, is entitled to name a candidate without waiting for presidential elections, said Piotr Winczorek, a professor of constitutional law at Warsaw University.
The zloty lost as much as 0.7 percent against the euro today before recovering to trade at 3.8607 at 5:13 p.m. in Warsaw.
Investors have pared bets on rate increases, with forward-rate agreements used to speculate on borrowing costs nine months from now trading 33 basis points above the current three-month Warsaw interbank offered rate. That compares with 71 basis points on March 5, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
‘More Active’
“The next few days will show how lasting the impact of the central bank action is,” said Piotr Bielski, a Warsaw-based economist at Bank Zachodni WBK, a unit of Allied Irish Banks Plc. “Investors will now have to be aware that Poland’s exchange rate policy is becoming more active, which should help to ease appreciation pressure on the zloty.”
Poland’s central bank appointed Skrzypek’s deputy Piotr Wiesiolek as acting governor after the crash, in Smolensk, western Russia, killed all 96 passengers, including President Lech Kaczynski, on route to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the massacre of thousands of Polish officers by Soviet forces at the Katyn forest.
‘Realistic’
Skrzypek, who like Kaczynski was a euro-skeptic, was appointed by the president in 2007 for a six-year term.
Poland abandoned its 2012 euro adoption target last July after it became clear it would miss the bloc’s fiscal targets. Pro-euro Tusk now says 2015 is a “realistic” date.
Preston Keat, London-based research director of Eurasia Group, a political risk consulting company, said tension between Skrzypek and the government over Poland’s euro aspirations and central-bank accounting had made investors jumpy and prone to “overreact.”
That attitude may now change, even if policy remains broadly similar, said Michael Ganske, head of emerging-markets research at Commerzbank AG in London.
“There will be stability, especially because the authorities understand that market participants are nervous and in this environment you need continuity,” Ganske said. “There is no way there’s going to a be a major political, structural change after this accident. It’s about keeping stable governance, stable institutions like the central bank and economic policy. It’s more a psychological phenomenon than something that forces major changes in policy.”
--With assistance from Dorota Bartyzel in Warsaw and Agnes Lovasz in London. Editors: Tasneem Brogger, Chris Kirkham.Source: businessweek.com/
Poland's economic legacy is tribute to leaders who died on Saturda
aroslaw Kaczynski, the twin brother of Polish President Lech Kaczynski, prays by the coffin of his brother at Warsaw's airport Photo: AFP/GETTY
Stalin's massacre in 1940 wounded a nation which was doomed to suffer for decades. Perhaps the greatest tribute that can be paid to Saturday's air crash victims is that they leave a strong, independent country and a sound economy, able to withstand this shocking accident.
President Lech Kaczynski and Slawomir Skrzypek, the governor of the central bank, were among the many political, military, intellectual and religious leaders killed. Bronislaw Komorowski, the parliamentary speaker, has taken over as interim president and will call an election by mid-year. Komorowski was expected to be a presidential candidate in the elections previously scheduled for October. The polls were predicting that he would defeat Kaczynski
At the central bank, Piotr Wiesiolek, Skrzypek's deputy, has taken temporary charge. Komorowski says a new permanent governor will be appointed quickly.
The legacy of those who died on Saturday is a resilient Poland. The zloty's fall of close to one-third when the global crisis was at its worst a little over a year ago helped cushion the Polish economy. Growth of 1.7pc in 2009 was remarkable given that European Union countries contracted by an average of 4.1pc and no other EU economy grew at all. Investors have taken note. The central bank acted last week to try to stem the zloty's steady appreciation over recent months.
Luck has played a part in Poland's success. Car scrappage schemes in Germany and elsewhere favoured Polish manufacturers. But the conservatism of Kaczynski and other Polish leaders also deserves credit. Poland avoided eastern Europe's worst lending binges. Kaczynski frustrated some of his opponents by being in no rush to head towards the euro party.
Economic prospects remain good. The fiscal deficit may approach 7pc of GDP this year and needs to be reduced. But growth is expected to be about 3pc this year and the government aims to raise about $10 billion from sales of state assets, including in the largest insurance company, PZU.
Poland is traumatised by the accident and by the cruel irony that those killed were en route for Katyn. Russian grief over the accident has been welcomed in Poland. A little balm has been poured on the appalling wound of 70 years ago. That Poland's fate is so much better now reflects in part the life work of those who died on Saturday.
Source: telegraph.co.uk/
Stalin's massacre in 1940 wounded a nation which was doomed to suffer for decades. Perhaps the greatest tribute that can be paid to Saturday's air crash victims is that they leave a strong, independent country and a sound economy, able to withstand this shocking accident.
President Lech Kaczynski and Slawomir Skrzypek, the governor of the central bank, were among the many political, military, intellectual and religious leaders killed. Bronislaw Komorowski, the parliamentary speaker, has taken over as interim president and will call an election by mid-year. Komorowski was expected to be a presidential candidate in the elections previously scheduled for October. The polls were predicting that he would defeat Kaczynski
At the central bank, Piotr Wiesiolek, Skrzypek's deputy, has taken temporary charge. Komorowski says a new permanent governor will be appointed quickly.
The legacy of those who died on Saturday is a resilient Poland. The zloty's fall of close to one-third when the global crisis was at its worst a little over a year ago helped cushion the Polish economy. Growth of 1.7pc in 2009 was remarkable given that European Union countries contracted by an average of 4.1pc and no other EU economy grew at all. Investors have taken note. The central bank acted last week to try to stem the zloty's steady appreciation over recent months.
Luck has played a part in Poland's success. Car scrappage schemes in Germany and elsewhere favoured Polish manufacturers. But the conservatism of Kaczynski and other Polish leaders also deserves credit. Poland avoided eastern Europe's worst lending binges. Kaczynski frustrated some of his opponents by being in no rush to head towards the euro party.
Economic prospects remain good. The fiscal deficit may approach 7pc of GDP this year and needs to be reduced. But growth is expected to be about 3pc this year and the government aims to raise about $10 billion from sales of state assets, including in the largest insurance company, PZU.
Poland is traumatised by the accident and by the cruel irony that those killed were en route for Katyn. Russian grief over the accident has been welcomed in Poland. A little balm has been poured on the appalling wound of 70 years ago. That Poland's fate is so much better now reflects in part the life work of those who died on Saturday.
Source: telegraph.co.uk/
Jews honor Holocaust victims, Polish officials
OSWIECIM, Poland — Thousands of young Jews along with Holocaust survivors marched Monday at Auschwitz to remember those who perished in the Nazi death camp, and to honor Poland's late president.
The 10,000 or so people from around the world attending the annual March of the Living walked the stretch of about 3 kilometers (2 miles) between the red-brick Auschwitz compound and the death camp's wooden barracks section of Birkenau.
At least 1.1 million people — mostly Jews, Poles and Roma — died in the gas chambers at Auschwitz or from starvation, disease and forced labor at the camp that German Nazis built in occupied Poland during World War II.
Many in Monday's annual march also wore black arm bands or carried black ribbons in memory of Poland's President Lech Kaczynski and his wife, Maria, who were killed in a plane crash Saturday along with 94 others en route to WWII-era observances in western Russia.
Israeli Ambassador Zvi Rav-Ner read out a message in Hebrew, English and Polish saying this year's marchers were also "paying homage" to Kaczynski and the other plane crash victims.
"Lech Kaczynski and his wife were friends of the state of Israel and of the Jewish nation. Today we will march in solidarity with the entire Polish nation," Rav-Ner said while standing by the infamous gate with a sign reading "Arbeit Macht Frei," or "Work Makes You Free."
The inscription was meant to mislead inmates into thinking they were arriving at Auschwitz to work, not die. The metal sign now in place is a replica of the original, which is undergoing renovation after it was stolen in December and recovered two days later.
By tradition, the march started with the blowing of the shofar, or ram's horn, at the gate.
The Auschwitz camp was liberated in January 1945 by Soviet troops.
Source:AFP
The 10,000 or so people from around the world attending the annual March of the Living walked the stretch of about 3 kilometers (2 miles) between the red-brick Auschwitz compound and the death camp's wooden barracks section of Birkenau.
At least 1.1 million people — mostly Jews, Poles and Roma — died in the gas chambers at Auschwitz or from starvation, disease and forced labor at the camp that German Nazis built in occupied Poland during World War II.
Many in Monday's annual march also wore black arm bands or carried black ribbons in memory of Poland's President Lech Kaczynski and his wife, Maria, who were killed in a plane crash Saturday along with 94 others en route to WWII-era observances in western Russia.
Israeli Ambassador Zvi Rav-Ner read out a message in Hebrew, English and Polish saying this year's marchers were also "paying homage" to Kaczynski and the other plane crash victims.
"Lech Kaczynski and his wife were friends of the state of Israel and of the Jewish nation. Today we will march in solidarity with the entire Polish nation," Rav-Ner said while standing by the infamous gate with a sign reading "Arbeit Macht Frei," or "Work Makes You Free."
The inscription was meant to mislead inmates into thinking they were arriving at Auschwitz to work, not die. The metal sign now in place is a replica of the original, which is undergoing renovation after it was stolen in December and recovered two days later.
By tradition, the march started with the blowing of the shofar, or ram's horn, at the gate.
The Auschwitz camp was liberated in January 1945 by Soviet troops.
Source:AFP
Polish air crash puts spotlight on pilots' duties
NEW YORK — Even up against tough weather and tight schedules, pilots are supposed to have the last word on when, where and how to land their aircraft. But aviation veterans, trying to make sense of the fog-shrouded crash that killed Poland's president, say pressures on pilots to keep VIP passengers on schedule can sometimes override safety considerations.
"There are certain CEOs and bosses — you are going to get them to where they want to go, and there aren't any ifs, ands or buts," said David Weitz, a pilot who has flown many corporate and union leaders.
"It plays on the pilot's mind," said Weitz, of Leesburg, Va. "He may go to some heroics that maybe he wouldn't normally do, if there's some pressure from the back of the plane."
No official conclusions have been drawn about the weekend crash in Russia that killed Polish President Lech Kaczynski and 95 others, including dozens of Polish political, military and religious leaders.
However, the pilot of the government plane had been warned of dense fog at the destination airport in Smolensk and was advised by traffic controllers to land elsewhere, even though that would have delayed observances of a World War II massacre.
The circumstances sparked speculation in Poland that the pilot had been pressured by his superiors to land at Smolensk rather than diverting.
Under standard aviation procedures, a landing has to be cleared by an air traffic controller. If a pilot wants to land despite controllers' advice, he can declare an emergency and land at his own risk.
"In this country, it's totally the pilot's responsibility," said FAA spokesman Les Dorr. "The only thing the controllers do is relay the weather conditions and the conditions of the runway and so forth. It's the responsibility of the captain of the aircraft to decide whether it's safe to land."
But airlines and aircraft owners sometimes pressure pilots to fly or to land against their better judgment, said safety consultant Jack Casey, a former airline pilot.
Usually, that kind of pressure — known in the industry as "pilot pushing" — is subtle, rather than overt, Casey said. Pilots may feel their job is at risk if they rebuff an employer, he said.
The issue of pilot pushing was raised last year at a House committee hearing on airline safety, which included a discussion of the FAA's effort to rewrite rules on how many hours airlines can require pilots to work in a day and how much rest they must be given between flights.
John Prater, president of the Air Line Pilots Association, testified that some regional airlines pressure pilots to fly even when they have not had enough sleep.
In general, though, it would be unusual for an airline or an aircraft owner in the U.S. or most other Western countries to attempt to override a pilot's judgment, Casey said.
"In corporate aviation, you might find a case where the boss has spent $45 million for his Gulfstream and, because of weather or whatever, he's being told he can't go where he wants to go" and resorts to pressure, Casey said.
"It's a pilot's job to separate themselves from other things in the environment such as a desire get home or a desire to get someplace on time," said Bill Voss, president of the Flight Safety Foundation in Alexandria, Va. "You are supposed to be weighing things based on the risk."
However, William Yavorsky, who retired in 2008 after a 40-year career as a private pilot flying political and business leaders, recalled facing intense pressure from one of his former corporate employers — including flying on a six-day, multi-stop flight around the world with working hours far exceeding the safe norms for pilots.
"The captain has the ultimate responsibility and authority, and everybody else is in an advisory capacity, including air traffic control," said Yavorsky, of Merritt Island, Fla.
"But in reality, we were scared to death of the chairman of board," he said. "When the boss has to go some place, he can make your life miserable."
Yavorsky, whose passengers over the years included a former president of the Republic of the Congo and the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, said the top VIPs often were deferential to the pilots, while their executive assistants would be the ones exerting pressure to stay on schedule.
"These are the guys trying to make things work for the boss at your expense," Yavorsky said.
One potential problem, said David Weitz, is pressure by VIP passengers to land at the airport closest to their final destination, even if safety conditions would be better at a more distant airport.
"Maybe it isn't the best choice in terms of runway length, or maybe there's no mechanic there," he said.
While pressure on pilots is often subtle, investigators have pointed to it as a contributing factor in several air crashes over the years.
In its investigation of the March 2001 crash of a chartered jet at the Aspen, Colo., airport, the National Transportation Safety Board found the pilot had been under intense pressure. The flight was pushing up against the destination airport's closing time, and the customer who paid for the charter arrived late for departure from Los Angeles.
When the pilot explained he might be forced to divert to another airport, the customer was "irate" and had his assistant call the charter company to say the pilot should "keep his comments to himself."
Then, minutes before landing at Aspen — at a time so late that the curfew would make a second attempt impossible — one of the passengers stepped forward and joined the crew, buckling himself into the cockpit's jump seat.
"The presence of this passenger in the cockpit, especially if it were the charter customer, most likely further heightened the pressure on the flight crew to land" at Aspen, the NTSB found. After that crash, charter company Avjet Corp. changed its procedures to ban customers from the cockpit jump seat.
In the August 2001 crash that killed singer Aaliyah on the Caribbean island of Abaco, investigators found that the plane was packed with luggage and passengers exceeding the craft's weight limit. Airport employees said that baggage handlers and the pilot protested before takeoff, but the passengers demanded they be allowed to bring all the items.
External pressure on pilot was also cited as one of many factors that may have contributed to the April 1996 crash in Croatia that killed Secretary of Commerce Ron Brown and 34 others aboard an Air Force plane. Investigators found that the crew had improperly planned the route.
"The error added 15 minutes to the planned flight time and may have caused the crew to rush the approach," the Department of Defense said in a briefing on its investigation of the crash.
"It's a reality of the job almost every day," said Mark Duell, vice president of operations of Flight Aware, whose Web site tracks status of flights in process. "The guys in the back want to get there, and the guys in the front do have the ultimate call. But when the guy in the back is screaming about firing, the pilots sometimes do give in."
In difficult conditions, air traffic controllers provide crucial information and instructions for landing, but once they give clearance, they defer to a pilot's judgment, said Ron Taylor, president of the Professional Air Controllers Organization, which represents about 300 tower workers at various airports.
"The pressure's going to be on the pilot. The controller's just advising, saying this is what we've got, this is the current weather," said Taylor, formerly a controller at Palm Beach International Airport and Miami Air Route Traffic Control Center. "The controller....can't stop him."
At U.S. airports, it is not uncommon for a pilot encountering bad weather to miss on a first approach to the runway and try again, Taylor said. But if a second attempt also fails, the rule of thumb calls for diverting the flight to a nearby airport.
In such an instance, Taylor said, there's little tension between traffic control and the crew, with most pilots maintaining a calm professionalism that betrays little hint of any pressures they may be under.
"There could be people in the back or whatever, saying 'I want to get on the ground.' That's all part of the gig. The captain knows his own limitations. He should know the terrain. He should know the approach."
But Taylor said he was astounded by reports that the crash in Smolensk came on the fifth attempt to land as perhaps a sign of extraordinary pressure on the cockpit.
The pilot "makes the final call. If it's a good call and things go right or if its a bad call and something goes wrong, he doesn't have much margin of error."
Associated Press writers Joan Lowy in Washington and Slobodan Lekic in Kabul, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.
Source:AFP
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Poland in shock as president feared dead in crash
Lech Kaczynski has been president of Poland since December 2005 Photo: AP
President Lech Kaczynski was travelling with his wife from Warsaw to Smolensk airport, 220 miles southwest of Moscow, when his plane crashed in thick fog.
Poland was left stunned by the news that their president, his wife, and a whole swath of the Polish elite had been killed.
A television newsreader fought back tears as she relayed the news that the head of the Polish army and the head of the presidential administration were also on board the plane, along with the president's wife and families of other senior officials.
The plane was also carrying the governor of Poland's central bank, Slawomir Skrzypek.
Sergei Antufiev, the regional governor of the Smolensk, said that everyone on board had been killed.
"It clipped the tops of the trees, crashed down and broke into pieces," Mr Antufiev, told Russia-24 television news network by telephone. "There were no survivors." Polish state news agency PAP also said there were no survivors.
William Hague, shadow foreign minister, wrote on Twitter: "Very sad this morning about the death of Lech Kaczynski in a plane crash - a brave man who was interned by the Communists for his beliefs."
Mr Kaczynski, 60, had been president since December 2005. He was married with one daughter.
Mr Kaczynski had been flying to Katyn, near Smolensk, to commemorate Russian and Polish victims of Soviet leader Josef Stalin.
Thousands of Polish prisoners of war and intellectuals were murdered at Katyn by Soviet forces in spring 1940 in an enduring symbol for Poles of their suffering under Soviet rule.
Families of those killed at Katyn were also on board the plane, the Polish government official at the airport said.
In the case of a president's death, the speaker of the lower chamber of parliament, Bronislaw Komorowski, takes over as head of state, Mr Komorowski's assistant Jerzy Smolinski told Reuters.
Conditions around the airport were described as foggy when the Tupolev Tu-154 came down a mile from the airport.
Source: telegraph.co.uk/
President Lech Kaczynski was travelling with his wife from Warsaw to Smolensk airport, 220 miles southwest of Moscow, when his plane crashed in thick fog.
Poland was left stunned by the news that their president, his wife, and a whole swath of the Polish elite had been killed.
A television newsreader fought back tears as she relayed the news that the head of the Polish army and the head of the presidential administration were also on board the plane, along with the president's wife and families of other senior officials.
The plane was also carrying the governor of Poland's central bank, Slawomir Skrzypek.
Sergei Antufiev, the regional governor of the Smolensk, said that everyone on board had been killed.
"It clipped the tops of the trees, crashed down and broke into pieces," Mr Antufiev, told Russia-24 television news network by telephone. "There were no survivors." Polish state news agency PAP also said there were no survivors.
William Hague, shadow foreign minister, wrote on Twitter: "Very sad this morning about the death of Lech Kaczynski in a plane crash - a brave man who was interned by the Communists for his beliefs."
Mr Kaczynski, 60, had been president since December 2005. He was married with one daughter.
Mr Kaczynski had been flying to Katyn, near Smolensk, to commemorate Russian and Polish victims of Soviet leader Josef Stalin.
Thousands of Polish prisoners of war and intellectuals were murdered at Katyn by Soviet forces in spring 1940 in an enduring symbol for Poles of their suffering under Soviet rule.
Families of those killed at Katyn were also on board the plane, the Polish government official at the airport said.
In the case of a president's death, the speaker of the lower chamber of parliament, Bronislaw Komorowski, takes over as head of state, Mr Komorowski's assistant Jerzy Smolinski told Reuters.
Conditions around the airport were described as foggy when the Tupolev Tu-154 came down a mile from the airport.
Source: telegraph.co.uk/
Polish president killed in plane crash: officials
MOSCOW — Polish President Lech Kaczynski and scores of other people were killed Saturday when the president's plane crashed on landing in the western Russian city of Smolensk, officials said.
The Smolensk regional governor, Sergei Antufiev, said the plane clipped treetops as it approached to land at an airport outside Smolensk and crashed, breaking into several pieces.
Russian television broadcast live footage showing the plane's wreckage scattered in a forest with parts of it still on fire.
Russian news agencies reported there were at least 80 people aboard the plane -- some reports said there were as many as 132 people on board -- and Antufiev said no one had survived.
"It clipped the tops of the trees, crashed down and broke into pieces," the governor of the Smolensk region, Sergei Antufiev, told Russia-24 television news network by telephone from Smolensk.
"There were no survivors."
The television pictures showed the plane broken into many pieces, including engines and a huge chunk of the plane's vertical stabilizer caked in mud, strewn over a large area in forest that was blanketed with fog.
Firefighters were dousing water on portions of the plane that were still ablaze while groups of security personnel in camouflage uniforms and clusters of investigators in civilian clothes inspected the wreckage.
The Russian foreign ministry told Interfax news agency that the plane had crashed in heavy fog.
Officials in Warsaw confirmed that Kaczynski was aboard the plane that crashed and Russian television broadcast video shot earlier Saturday of the president and his wife boarding the plane in Warsaw.
Polish foreign ministry spokesman Piotr Pszkowski said that the army chief of staff and Deputy Foreign Minsiter Andrzej Kremer were also on board the plane.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev immediately appointed Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as the head of a commission to investigate the crash and sent Russia's emergency situations minister, Sergei Shoigu, to the site.
The aircraft crashed a few hundred metres short of the runway at the Severny airport outside Smolensk, ITAR-TASS news agency reported, quoting rescuers at the site.
The flight data recorders of the plane had not yet been located but experts were on the scene and the search for them was under way, ITAR-TASS said.
Kaczynski, the identical twin brother of former prime minister Jaroslaw, was on his way to attend commemorative ceremonies at the forest of Katyn in western Russia where 22,000 Poles were killed by Soviet troops 70 years ago.
The crash of his plane occurred three days after Putin and his Polish counterpart, Donald Tusk, together attended a memorial for the victims of the massacre at Katyn.
The Putin-Tusk meeting there was seen as a huge symbolic advance in Russia's often thorny relations with Poland.
Source: AFP
The Smolensk regional governor, Sergei Antufiev, said the plane clipped treetops as it approached to land at an airport outside Smolensk and crashed, breaking into several pieces.
Russian television broadcast live footage showing the plane's wreckage scattered in a forest with parts of it still on fire.
Russian news agencies reported there were at least 80 people aboard the plane -- some reports said there were as many as 132 people on board -- and Antufiev said no one had survived.
"It clipped the tops of the trees, crashed down and broke into pieces," the governor of the Smolensk region, Sergei Antufiev, told Russia-24 television news network by telephone from Smolensk.
"There were no survivors."
The television pictures showed the plane broken into many pieces, including engines and a huge chunk of the plane's vertical stabilizer caked in mud, strewn over a large area in forest that was blanketed with fog.
Firefighters were dousing water on portions of the plane that were still ablaze while groups of security personnel in camouflage uniforms and clusters of investigators in civilian clothes inspected the wreckage.
The Russian foreign ministry told Interfax news agency that the plane had crashed in heavy fog.
Officials in Warsaw confirmed that Kaczynski was aboard the plane that crashed and Russian television broadcast video shot earlier Saturday of the president and his wife boarding the plane in Warsaw.
Polish foreign ministry spokesman Piotr Pszkowski said that the army chief of staff and Deputy Foreign Minsiter Andrzej Kremer were also on board the plane.
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev immediately appointed Prime Minister Vladimir Putin as the head of a commission to investigate the crash and sent Russia's emergency situations minister, Sergei Shoigu, to the site.
The aircraft crashed a few hundred metres short of the runway at the Severny airport outside Smolensk, ITAR-TASS news agency reported, quoting rescuers at the site.
The flight data recorders of the plane had not yet been located but experts were on the scene and the search for them was under way, ITAR-TASS said.
Kaczynski, the identical twin brother of former prime minister Jaroslaw, was on his way to attend commemorative ceremonies at the forest of Katyn in western Russia where 22,000 Poles were killed by Soviet troops 70 years ago.
The crash of his plane occurred three days after Putin and his Polish counterpart, Donald Tusk, together attended a memorial for the victims of the massacre at Katyn.
The Putin-Tusk meeting there was seen as a huge symbolic advance in Russia's often thorny relations with Poland.
Source: AFP
Polish president feared dead in crash
Lech Kacyznski, Poland’s president, was feared dead Saturday morning when the airliner carrying him and a large delegation crashed near the Russian city of Smolensk; Piotr Paszkowski, the foreign ministry spokesman, says there were 88 people aboard the aircraft, and that there were no survivors.
The Russian-built Tu-154 airliner apparently hit a tree just before 11 am local time while landing in foggy conditions, Mr Paszkowski told the Gazeta Wyborcza website. The airliner then caught fire.
“It looks very bad,” said Mr Paszkowski.
Reporters on the scene said they could see remnants of the airplane scattered among the trees near the airport.
As well as Mr Kaczynski and his wife, Maria, the aircraft was carrying a delegation of as many as 132 people that reportedly included Ryszard Kaczorowski, the former president of Poland’s London-based government-in-exile, Slawomir Skrzypek, the central bank governor, Jerzy Szmajdzinski, the presidential candidate of the left-wing Democratic Left Alliance, as well as bishops, military officials and other dignitaries.
They were flying to Russia to take part in commemorations of the 70th anniversary of the killing of 20,000 Polish officers by the Soviets in 1940. The best-known murder site, Katyn, where 4,000 Poles were killed, lies just outside Smolensk.
Bronislaw Komorowski, the speaker of parliament, is headed to Warsaw to take over Mr Kaczynski’’s duties.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.
Source:
The Russian-built Tu-154 airliner apparently hit a tree just before 11 am local time while landing in foggy conditions, Mr Paszkowski told the Gazeta Wyborcza website. The airliner then caught fire.
“It looks very bad,” said Mr Paszkowski.
Reporters on the scene said they could see remnants of the airplane scattered among the trees near the airport.
As well as Mr Kaczynski and his wife, Maria, the aircraft was carrying a delegation of as many as 132 people that reportedly included Ryszard Kaczorowski, the former president of Poland’s London-based government-in-exile, Slawomir Skrzypek, the central bank governor, Jerzy Szmajdzinski, the presidential candidate of the left-wing Democratic Left Alliance, as well as bishops, military officials and other dignitaries.
They were flying to Russia to take part in commemorations of the 70th anniversary of the killing of 20,000 Polish officers by the Soviets in 1940. The best-known murder site, Katyn, where 4,000 Poles were killed, lies just outside Smolensk.
Bronislaw Komorowski, the speaker of parliament, is headed to Warsaw to take over Mr Kaczynski’’s duties.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.
Source:
Putin: Easing the burden of memory
Certain dates, events, and places become emblems of unforgettable suffering for an entire people. Auschwitz holds that meaning for Jews, as does the 1915 death march for Armenians or the 1922 Smyrna massacre for Greeks. Polish memory is haunted by the Red Army’s execution of 22,000 Polish officers and intellectuals in the Katyn forest in the spring of 1940.
So Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was making a valuable, if belated, gesture of reconciliation Wednesday when he laid a wreath at the Katyn gravesite, under a memorial inscribed with the names of the murdered Polish prisoners of war. During the communist era, Polish schoolchildren were taught that the Katyn crimes were committed by the Nazis. Poles knew this was an official lie. Finally, in 1992, then-Russian President Boris Yeltsin ended the lies by releasing a copy of a Stalin-era document resolving to kill the Polish prisoners because they were “inveterate and incorrigible enemies of the Soviet power.’’
Hard as it may be, Putin should now complete the work of reconciliation by recognizing the Katyn massacre as a war crime and ordering that all remaining Stalinist archives on that crime be opened to researchers. Truth is inseparable from reconciliation.
Source: boston.com/
So Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was making a valuable, if belated, gesture of reconciliation Wednesday when he laid a wreath at the Katyn gravesite, under a memorial inscribed with the names of the murdered Polish prisoners of war. During the communist era, Polish schoolchildren were taught that the Katyn crimes were committed by the Nazis. Poles knew this was an official lie. Finally, in 1992, then-Russian President Boris Yeltsin ended the lies by releasing a copy of a Stalin-era document resolving to kill the Polish prisoners because they were “inveterate and incorrigible enemies of the Soviet power.’’
Hard as it may be, Putin should now complete the work of reconciliation by recognizing the Katyn massacre as a war crime and ordering that all remaining Stalinist archives on that crime be opened to researchers. Truth is inseparable from reconciliation.
Source: boston.com/
Polish Air Force 1 Crashed Heading for Katyn Massacre Anniversary
The plane that crashed carrying Polish President Lech Kaczynski and 86 others near Smolensk was taking the passengers to mark the Katyn massacre near the town.
Kaczynski was due to visit Smolensk to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, when Soviet troops killed thousands of Poles.
The Katyn massacre, also known as the Katyn Forest massacre (Polish: zbrodnia katyńska, 'Katyń crime'), was a mass murder of thousands of Polish prisoners of war (primarily military officers), intellectuals, policemen, and other public servants by the Soviet NKVD, based on a proposal from Lavrentiy Beria to execute all members of the Polish Officer Corps. Dated March 5, 1940, this official document was then approved (signed) by the entire Soviet Politburo including Joseph Stalin and Beria.
The number of victims is estimated at about 22,000, the most commonly cited number being 21 768. The victims were murdered in the Katyn Forest in Russia, the Kalinin and Kharkov prisons and elsewhere. About 8,000 were officers taken prisoner during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland, the rest being Poles arrested for allegedly being "intelligence agents, gendarmes, saboteurs, landowners, factory owners, lawyers, priests, and officials."
Nazi Germany announced the discovery of mass graves in the Katyn Forest in 1943. The revelation led to the end of diplomatic relations between Moscow and the London-based Polish government-in-exile.
Source: novinite.com/
Kaczynski was due to visit Smolensk to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, when Soviet troops killed thousands of Poles.
The Katyn massacre, also known as the Katyn Forest massacre (Polish: zbrodnia katyńska, 'Katyń crime'), was a mass murder of thousands of Polish prisoners of war (primarily military officers), intellectuals, policemen, and other public servants by the Soviet NKVD, based on a proposal from Lavrentiy Beria to execute all members of the Polish Officer Corps. Dated March 5, 1940, this official document was then approved (signed) by the entire Soviet Politburo including Joseph Stalin and Beria.
The number of victims is estimated at about 22,000, the most commonly cited number being 21 768. The victims were murdered in the Katyn Forest in Russia, the Kalinin and Kharkov prisons and elsewhere. About 8,000 were officers taken prisoner during the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland, the rest being Poles arrested for allegedly being "intelligence agents, gendarmes, saboteurs, landowners, factory owners, lawyers, priests, and officials."
Nazi Germany announced the discovery of mass graves in the Katyn Forest in 1943. The revelation led to the end of diplomatic relations between Moscow and the London-based Polish government-in-exile.
Source: novinite.com/
Parliament pays tribute to Katyn victims
Poland’s parliament, Friday, paid tribute to the memory of Polish POWs and Katyn “victims of the genocidal Soviet regime”.
In a special resolution, the parliament said that the decision to murder over 20, 000 Polish officers in 1940 taken by the Soviet authorities was a violation of the fundamental legal and moral principles. The resolution also refers to the lies about Katyn proffered for half a century by Soviet propaganda.
Polish parliamentarians paid tribute to all the victims of Stalin’s communism, saying that the painful experiences of the 20th century’s totalitarian systems should unite Poles with the Russians, Ukrainians and Belorussians and not divide them.
Polish MPs describe the presence of the Polish and Russian Prime Ministers at the Katyn ceremony two days ago as an important gesture of a symbolic significance. Polish-Russian reconciliation, the resolution says in closing, is possible only on the basis of the respect for truth and memory.
The resolution was passed as special train left from Warsaw to Smolensk went on Friday carrying several hundred relatives of Polish prisoners murdered by the NKVD in April 1940.
Participants will take part in a ceremony on Saturday in the Katyn Forest, attended by President Lech Kaczynski, in conjunction with the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre.
(mk/pg)
Source: thenews.pl/
In a special resolution, the parliament said that the decision to murder over 20, 000 Polish officers in 1940 taken by the Soviet authorities was a violation of the fundamental legal and moral principles. The resolution also refers to the lies about Katyn proffered for half a century by Soviet propaganda.
Polish parliamentarians paid tribute to all the victims of Stalin’s communism, saying that the painful experiences of the 20th century’s totalitarian systems should unite Poles with the Russians, Ukrainians and Belorussians and not divide them.
Polish MPs describe the presence of the Polish and Russian Prime Ministers at the Katyn ceremony two days ago as an important gesture of a symbolic significance. Polish-Russian reconciliation, the resolution says in closing, is possible only on the basis of the respect for truth and memory.
The resolution was passed as special train left from Warsaw to Smolensk went on Friday carrying several hundred relatives of Polish prisoners murdered by the NKVD in April 1940.
Participants will take part in a ceremony on Saturday in the Katyn Forest, attended by President Lech Kaczynski, in conjunction with the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre.
(mk/pg)
Source: thenews.pl/
Putin mourns Stalin-era massacre of Polish forces in unprecedented gesture to Poland
MOSCOW — Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin attended a memorial ceremony on Wednesday for 22,000 Polish prisoners who were killed by Soviet secret police during World War II in an unprecedented gesture of good will and reconciliation to Poland.
Putin - accompanied by his Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk - became the first Russian leader to ever commemorate the Katyn massacres with a Polish leader, and said the two nations' "fates had been inexorably joined" by the atrocities.
The 22,000 Polish officers, prisoners and intellectuals were massacred by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's secret police in 1940 in Katyn, a village near Russia's border with Belarus.
In what appeared to be his harshest condemnation of Stalin's rule to date, Putin said: "In our country there has been a clear political, legal and moral judgment made of the evil acts of this totalitarian regime, and this judgment cannot be revised."
But his speech stopped short of offering any apology to the Polish nation or calling the massacres a war crime, as some commentators in Poland had expected.
Also, while giving the go-ahead to a joint historic commission on the matter, Putin gave no concrete pledge that all Soviet archives documenting it would finally be unsealed.
Tusk used his emotional speech about the Polish victims to push Putin on this point.
"Prime minister, they are here. They are in this soil. The eye sockets of their bullet-pierced sculls are looking and waiting to see whether we are able to transform violence and lies into reconciliation," Tusk said.
For half a century, Soviet officials claimed that the mass executions had been carried out by Nazi occupiers during the Second World War. But the Soviet Union under Mikhail Gorbachev's rule admitted in 1990 that the crimes had been committed by Stalin's NKVD secret police, a precursor to the KGB.
The disclosure opened the floodgates of historical consciousness across the Soviet Union, speeding its demise as nations across the Eastern bloc awoke to the horrors of the Soviet regime and sought independence.
As recently as December, Putin resisted a broad denunciation of Stalin's reign. He told a call-in show with the Russian public that it was "impossible to make an overall judgment" against Stalin because he had industrialized the nation and played a key role in defeating the Nazis.
Russia also has clashed with its neighbours in Eastern Europe over what it has perceived as offences to the legacy of Stalin and the Red Army. The relocation of a Soviet war memorial in Estonia in 2007 was met with a bristling reaction from Moscow, as was a resolution made by European lawmakers in 2009 equating Stalinism and Fascism.
Putin's meeting with Tusk seems to be part of a broader Kremlin effort to avoid similar confrontations and improve ties with Europe.
President Dmitry Medvedev wrapped up a two-day visit to Slovakia on Tuesday, and said in the capital, Bratislava, that the EU-member state was a "very convenient and open door for Russia to the European Union."
"We are ready to actively go through this door," Medvedev said during a televised news conference with his Slovak counterpart, Ivan Gasparovic.
During the visit - marking the 65th anniversary of the Slovak capital's liberation from Nazi rule - Medvedev gave Slovak officials World War II documents from Russia's state archives.
Associated Press writer Monika Scislowska in Warsaw contributed to this report.
Source:AFP
Putin - accompanied by his Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk - became the first Russian leader to ever commemorate the Katyn massacres with a Polish leader, and said the two nations' "fates had been inexorably joined" by the atrocities.
The 22,000 Polish officers, prisoners and intellectuals were massacred by Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's secret police in 1940 in Katyn, a village near Russia's border with Belarus.
In what appeared to be his harshest condemnation of Stalin's rule to date, Putin said: "In our country there has been a clear political, legal and moral judgment made of the evil acts of this totalitarian regime, and this judgment cannot be revised."
But his speech stopped short of offering any apology to the Polish nation or calling the massacres a war crime, as some commentators in Poland had expected.
Also, while giving the go-ahead to a joint historic commission on the matter, Putin gave no concrete pledge that all Soviet archives documenting it would finally be unsealed.
Tusk used his emotional speech about the Polish victims to push Putin on this point.
"Prime minister, they are here. They are in this soil. The eye sockets of their bullet-pierced sculls are looking and waiting to see whether we are able to transform violence and lies into reconciliation," Tusk said.
For half a century, Soviet officials claimed that the mass executions had been carried out by Nazi occupiers during the Second World War. But the Soviet Union under Mikhail Gorbachev's rule admitted in 1990 that the crimes had been committed by Stalin's NKVD secret police, a precursor to the KGB.
The disclosure opened the floodgates of historical consciousness across the Soviet Union, speeding its demise as nations across the Eastern bloc awoke to the horrors of the Soviet regime and sought independence.
As recently as December, Putin resisted a broad denunciation of Stalin's reign. He told a call-in show with the Russian public that it was "impossible to make an overall judgment" against Stalin because he had industrialized the nation and played a key role in defeating the Nazis.
Russia also has clashed with its neighbours in Eastern Europe over what it has perceived as offences to the legacy of Stalin and the Red Army. The relocation of a Soviet war memorial in Estonia in 2007 was met with a bristling reaction from Moscow, as was a resolution made by European lawmakers in 2009 equating Stalinism and Fascism.
Putin's meeting with Tusk seems to be part of a broader Kremlin effort to avoid similar confrontations and improve ties with Europe.
President Dmitry Medvedev wrapped up a two-day visit to Slovakia on Tuesday, and said in the capital, Bratislava, that the EU-member state was a "very convenient and open door for Russia to the European Union."
"We are ready to actively go through this door," Medvedev said during a televised news conference with his Slovak counterpart, Ivan Gasparovic.
During the visit - marking the 65th anniversary of the Slovak capital's liberation from Nazi rule - Medvedev gave Slovak officials World War II documents from Russia's state archives.
Associated Press writer Monika Scislowska in Warsaw contributed to this report.
Source:AFP
Poland president dead as west Russia plane crash kills 132
Polish president Lech Kaczynski was killed on Saturday as his plane crashed on approach to Smolensk airport in western Russia, local officials said.
One hundred and thirty-two passengers in total were on board the plane, Polish officials told Haaretz, adding that the crash appeared accidental and that so far there was no suspicion of a terror attack.
There was no indication as to whether the crash was caused by a technical failure or human error.
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Poland's foreign ministry confirmed that the president and his wife, Maria, were aboard the plane. Polish state news agency PAP said there were no survivors in the crash, recorded at 10:50AM local time some 400km west of Moscow.
The Russian-built Tupolev Tu-154, which was over 20 years old, airplane went down some 1.5km from Smolensk airport in foggy conditions. The plane reportedly struck trees as it approached the airport and caught fire. The flames have since been extinguished.
Polish sources told Haaretz that despite a recent upgrade, the Smolensk airport not been fitted with special anti-fog radar common in the West.
A Polish official said the head of the Polish army and the head of the presidential administration were also on board the plane, along with the central bank governor and the other senior officials.
"The plane caught fire after the crash. Teams began attempting to pull out passengers from the badly damaged airplane," said a Polish Foreign Ministry spokesman in Warsaw.
Kaczynski was due to visit Smolensk to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, when Soviet troops killed 22,000 Poles. Planned ceremonies in Katyn were called off. Attendees said they would instead pray for the victims of the plane crash
The Polish government will hold an extraordinary meeting later on Saturday, the government press office said in a statement.
Bronislaw Komorowski, the speaker of Poland's parliament and a former defense minister will take over as interim president, sources told Haaretz.
Komorovski had already been named as a candidate to succeed Kaczynski following elections later in 2010.
Kaczynski, 60, became president in December 2005 after defeatingcurrent Prime Minister Donald Tusk in that year's presidential vote. The nationalist conservative was the twin brother of Poland's opposition
leader, former prime minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski
Source: haaretz.com/
One hundred and thirty-two passengers in total were on board the plane, Polish officials told Haaretz, adding that the crash appeared accidental and that so far there was no suspicion of a terror attack.
There was no indication as to whether the crash was caused by a technical failure or human error.
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Poland's foreign ministry confirmed that the president and his wife, Maria, were aboard the plane. Polish state news agency PAP said there were no survivors in the crash, recorded at 10:50AM local time some 400km west of Moscow.
The Russian-built Tupolev Tu-154, which was over 20 years old, airplane went down some 1.5km from Smolensk airport in foggy conditions. The plane reportedly struck trees as it approached the airport and caught fire. The flames have since been extinguished.
Polish sources told Haaretz that despite a recent upgrade, the Smolensk airport not been fitted with special anti-fog radar common in the West.
A Polish official said the head of the Polish army and the head of the presidential administration were also on board the plane, along with the central bank governor and the other senior officials.
"The plane caught fire after the crash. Teams began attempting to pull out passengers from the badly damaged airplane," said a Polish Foreign Ministry spokesman in Warsaw.
Kaczynski was due to visit Smolensk to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, when Soviet troops killed 22,000 Poles. Planned ceremonies in Katyn were called off. Attendees said they would instead pray for the victims of the plane crash
The Polish government will hold an extraordinary meeting later on Saturday, the government press office said in a statement.
Bronislaw Komorowski, the speaker of Poland's parliament and a former defense minister will take over as interim president, sources told Haaretz.
Komorovski had already been named as a candidate to succeed Kaczynski following elections later in 2010.
Kaczynski, 60, became president in December 2005 after defeatingcurrent Prime Minister Donald Tusk in that year's presidential vote. The nationalist conservative was the twin brother of Poland's opposition
leader, former prime minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski
Source: haaretz.com/
Reports are coming of a plane carrying the Polish president Lech Kaczynski and his wife has crashed in Russia killing all passengers.
Initial reports had said that at least 87 people were killed in the crash but officials have confirmed that all passengers on the plain heading to an airport in Smolensk a Western city in Russia have been killed.
Reports also say that the Chief of General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces and the Polish central bank governor was also on the plain.
Lech Kaczynski and his wife were due to visit the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, in which thousands of Poles were killed by Russian troops in the Soviet era.
The Polish Foreign Ministry also confirmed that the Polish president Lech Kaczynski was on board the plain the crashed at 10:56AM local time.
The Tupolev Tu-154 model plain is thought to have crashed in foggy weather but no official comment has come from the Polish or Russian government.
The Tupolev Tu-154, a Soviet era built plain is banned in many airports around the world.
Source: nationalturk.com/
Reports also say that the Chief of General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces and the Polish central bank governor was also on the plain.
Lech Kaczynski and his wife were due to visit the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre, in which thousands of Poles were killed by Russian troops in the Soviet era.
The Polish Foreign Ministry also confirmed that the Polish president Lech Kaczynski was on board the plain the crashed at 10:56AM local time.
The Tupolev Tu-154 model plain is thought to have crashed in foggy weather but no official comment has come from the Polish or Russian government.
The Tupolev Tu-154, a Soviet era built plain is banned in many airports around the world.
Source: nationalturk.com/
Polish President dies in plane crash
Eighty-seven people including Polish President Lech Kaczynski died when a plane flying from Warsaw crashed near its intended destination in the Russian city of Smolensk, Itar-Tass news agency reported, citing the Russian Emergencies Ministry.
The incident happened in thick fog as the aircraft came in to land.
Source: timesofmalta.com/
The incident happened in thick fog as the aircraft came in to land.
Source: timesofmalta.com/
Plane crash 'carrying Polish president' kills 87 people
Reports from Moscow say a plane carrying the Polish president Lech Kaczynski has crashed in western Russia and at least 87 people have been killed.
Russian media and the foreign Polish ministry is alleged to have said the president and his wife were on board the plane at the time, and it is not yet known whether there has been any survivors.
It is believed the plane crashed this morning near the city of Smolensk, killing 87 people.
Mr Kaczynski was due to visit the city to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre; during which Russian soldiers killed 22,000 Polish prisoners of war 70 years ago.
Source: inthenews.co.uk/
Russian media and the foreign Polish ministry is alleged to have said the president and his wife were on board the plane at the time, and it is not yet known whether there has been any survivors.
It is believed the plane crashed this morning near the city of Smolensk, killing 87 people.
Mr Kaczynski was due to visit the city to mark the 70th anniversary of the Katyn massacre; during which Russian soldiers killed 22,000 Polish prisoners of war 70 years ago.
Source: inthenews.co.uk/
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