Russia: Polish President presence factor in plane crash

MOSCOW, (Reuters) – Psychological pressure on the  crew of a plane carrying Polish President Lech Kaczynski to a  ceremony in Russia may have led to the April crash that killed  him and 95 others, Russian aviation officials said today.
“He’ll get mad,” one of the plane’s crew members said,  according to a flight recording excerpt aired during a press  conference by Russia’s Interstate Aviation Committee (IAC) on  the probe into the crash that killed Kaczynski and 95 others.

Lech Kaczynski
Lech Kaczynski

The comment was in Polish and a Russian language translation  was provided by the IAC.
IAC head Tatiana Anodina said the decision to push ahead  with a landing in adverse weather conditions was the direct  cause of the crash that killed many of Poland’s leading  political and military officials.
“On the one hand he (the pilot) knew the plane shouldn’t be  landing in these conditions, on the other hand there was a  strong pressure on board to bring the plane to a landing,” she  told a news briefing presenting the final report on the crash.
She said the presence of Kaczynski on the plane and of  high-level officials, including the Polish air force chief,  inside the cockpit influenced the pilot’s decision not to abort  the landing and instead try to fly to another airstrip.
“The expected negative reaction of the main passenger” to a  recommendation not to land “placed psychological pressure on  crew members and influenced the decision to continue the  landing,” Anodina said, clearly referring to Kaczynski.
The crash, which took place in thick fog near Russia’s  Smolensk airport on April 10, killed Kaczynski, his wife and   many other senior Polish government officials and lawmakers.
Poland, which received the IAC’s report in December, said at  the time that it was dissatisfied with its findings, sparking  new tensions between Warsaw and Moscow.