Polish president among 96 killed in plane crash

SMOLENSK, Russia, (Reuters) – Poland’s President  Lech Kaczynski, its central bank head and the country’s military  chief were among 96 people killed when their plane crashed in  thick fog on its approach to a Russian airport today.
The president’s wife and several other high-ranking  government officials were also aboard the Tupolev Tu-154 that  plunged into a forest about two km (1.3 miles) from the airport  in the western Russian city of Smolensk.
“The political consequences will be long-term and possibly  will change the entire future landscape of Polish politics,”  said Jacek Wasilewski, professor at the Higher School of Social  Psychology in Warsaw.
Polish government spokesman Pawel Gras said the country  would hold elections after the death of Kaczynski, who was 60  and had been president since 2005.
“In line with the constitution, we will have to hold an  early presidential poll,” Gras said. “For now, the speaker of  the lower house of parliament, Bronislaw Komorowski, is  automatically … the acting president.”
Russian television showed the smouldering fuselage and  fragments of the plane scattered in a forest. A Reuters reporter  saw a broken wing some distance from the rest of the aircraft.
Russia’s Emergencies Ministry said 96 people were aboard the  government plane, including 88 members of a Polish delegation en  route to commemorate Poles killed in mass murders in the town of  Katyn under orders from Soviet leader Josef Stalin in 1940.
Earlier reports had said 132 people were aboard. Smolensk  regional governor Sergei Antufyev and Polish state news agency  PAP said there were no survivors.
Pilot error was a possible reason for the crash, said Andrei  Yevseyenkov, spokesman for the Smolensk local government. Local  officials said the plane had clipped treetops on its way down.
A Russian mission control official who had been present  during conversations with the pilot told Reuters the pilot had  ignored advice.
“The pilot was advised to fly to Moscow or Minsk because of  heavy fog, but he still decided to land. No one should have been  landing in that fog,” he said, on condition his name was not  published.

FLOWERS AND CANDLES
Polish Justice Minister Krzysztof Kwiatkowski said he would  order a special inquiry into the crash.
Church services were hastily held throughout Poland. In  Warsaw people started gathering outside the presidential palace  to lay flowers and light candles.
“I’m all broken up … it cannot be expressed in words,”  said Ewa Robaczewska.
Among the other casualties of the crash were Kaczynski’s  wife Maria, along with Slawomir Skrzypek, 47, who had been  central bank governor since 2007, the chief of Poland’s military  Franciszek Gagor and Deputy Foreign Minister Andrzej Kremer.
Some relatives of victims of the Katyn massacres were also  on board, said a Polish government official in Smolensk.
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.