Poland blames Russian traffic controllers for presidential plane crash in 2010


Two Russian air traffic controllers to be charged by Poland with ‘unintentional acts leading to the fatal crash of then-President Lech Kaczynski in 2010’, reuters.com reports.

Prosecutor Ireneusz Szelag from the District Military Prosecutors’ Office told a news briefing an investigation so far had established that the main cause of the crash was the failure of the plane’s crew to respond adequately to bad weather.

But Szelag said prosecutors had begun the process of presenting two charges to air traffic controllers involved in guiding the aircraft in to land at an airport in Smolensk, western Russia.

“Experts’ opinions have given us reasons to issue on March 24 a decision to charge … two Russian citizens, members of the flight control group,” Szelag said.

He said one charge was bringing about the direct threat of an air traffic disaster, and the second was unintentionally bringing about an air traffic disaster.

It is very unlikely that Russia would agree to the officials’ extradition to Poland to stand trial.

Szelag did not name the people to be charged, and declined to give details about what the controllers are alleged to have done, or failed to do, that contributed to the crash.

The plane crash, which killed eight crew members and 88 passengers, including Kaczynski and a number of high-ranking Polish officials, shook Polish society. The President was on his way to a commemoration at Katyn, the site in western Russia where during World War Two the Soviet secret police executed thousands of imprisoned Polish military officers and buried them in mass graves.

www.belsat.eu/en/, via Reuters

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