Polish Special Services to Be Blamed for Concealing 2010 Plane
Crash Data
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - Poland's Internal Security Agency (ABW) concealed part
of the information from an investigation into the 2010 plane crash near Russia's
Smolensk, in which all passengers, including then-Polish President Lech
Kaczynski, died, the minister in charge of the ABW, Mariusz Kaminski, said
Wednesday.
On Wednesday, Poland's ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party is unveiling a
report on the work of the previous government, which led the country from 2007
to 2015. The speeches of ministers are being broadcast live on Polish
television.
According to Kaminski, the agency received images of the crash site from US
intelligence two days after the crash and was obliged to hand them over to the
prosecutor's office immediately, but this was only done 10 months later when the
latter learned about the images from the US side.
Kaminski also said that the ABW did provide the authorities with
information on a Russian citizen, who appealed to the Polish Embassy in Moscow
in May 2010, saying that he had some information on the crash possibly being the
result of an attack. The Polish side did not check this information and instead
referred the man to the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), the minister
noted.
The plane carrying Kaczynski, his wife and a number of high-ranking
officials crashed in heavy fog as it attempted to land at an airfield near the
Russian city of Smolensk on April 10, 2010, killing all 96 passengers and crew
on board. The Moscow-based Interstate Aviation Committee (IAC or MAK) said in a
report that the crew's decision not to route the plane to an alternative
aerodrome was the direct cause of the crash.
In early February, the Polish Defense Ministry said that Warsaw would
restart its investigation into the crash from the very
beginning.
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