Plane crash case: Court issues summons against Raja Bhaiyya

Pratapgarh (UP), June 6 (PTI) A local court has issued summons to controversial independent MLA Raghuraj Pratap Singh alias Raja Bhaiyya and two others in a case in which the former UP minister was accused of flying a two-seater plane without a license which crash-landed here last year. “On the basis of a chargesheet filed by police, the court has directed Kunda MLA, Raja Bhaiyya, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto and pilot Captain Ramesh chandra Ramnani to appear in person before it on July 3,” prosecution sources said.

Raja Bhaiyya and two others had a close shave on the evening of March 22 last year after the private ”microlite” aircraft they were flying crashed on the banks of Chausa river in Dheemi village of Pratapgarh district. Raja Bhaiyya and the pilot sustained serious injuries in the accident.

It was alleged that Raja Bhaiyya was flying the aircraft at the time of the crash. Later an FIR was lodged at Hathgawan police station against Raja Bhaiyya, Zulfiqar and Capt Ramnani under Section 2/3 of the Aircraft Act 1934 and Sections 279, 338, 201 of the IPC. The sections cover charges of flying an aircraft without a licence, flying in a prohibited area, not informing ATC before flying and causing danger to public by flying without a skilled pilot.

Director (Safety), Civil Aviation Department, Ramnath also probed into the incident. The investigating officer recently filed a chargesheet against the three accused in the court, the sources said.

Russia hands over plane crash recordings to Poland

(Reuters) – Russia agreed Monday to give Poland copies of cockpit recordings as part of an investigation into last month’s plane crash that killed Polish President Lech Kaczynski.

World | Russia

During a meeting in Moscow, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov and Polish Interior Minister Jerzy Miller signed an agreement allowing Poland to obtain the recordings.

Under the deal, the original black box recordings will stay in Russia until the investigation is completed.

“Handing over the copies does not mean the investigation is over,” Ivanov said during the meeting.

Kaczynski’s plane — a Russian-built TU-154 aircraft — crashed outside Russia’s Smolensk airport on April 10, killing the Polish leader and 95 others.

Among those who died with Kaczynski were the heads of Poland’s army and navy, its central bank governor, lawmakers and members of the presidential administration.

The Polish leader was running late for a planned ceremony in nearby Katyn forest marking the 70th anniversary of the murder of some 22,000 Polish army officers and intellectuals there by the Soviet NKVD secret police.

During the Moscow meeting, Ivanov and Miller praised cooperation between their countries as transparent and unprecedented. Handing over the copies will help Poland with its own investigation and analysis of the crash.

Ivanov said that under an international agreement on plane crash investigations, not all data can be made public before the case is closed, including communication between the pilots and control towers.

Miller told reporters after the meeting that the sides had agreed there would be no “surprises” when it comes to publication of information, adding however that it is up to Warsaw to decide which data should be made public.

Miller said: “The Russian side will be informed in advance, but we do not need consent to make this public.”

Poles will elect a new president on June 20. Kaczynski’s twin brother Jaroslaw is running for the post but is expected to take second place behind Bronislaw Komorowski, the candidate of Tusk’s centrist ruling Civic Platform.

Russia hands over plane crash recordings to Poland

MOSCOW, May 31 (Reuters) – Russia agreed on Monday to give Poland copies of cockpit recordings as part of an investigation into last month’s plane crash that killed Polish President Lech Kaczynski.

During a meeting in Moscow, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov and Polish Interior Minister Jerzy Miller signed an agreement allowing Poland to obtain the recordings.

Under the deal, the original black box recordings will stay in Russia until the investigation is completed.

“Handing over the copies does not mean the investigation is over,” Ivanov said during the meeting.

Kaczynski’s plane — a Russian-built TU-154 aircraft — crashed outside Russia’s Smolensk airport on April 10, killing the Polish leader and 95 others.

Among those who died with Kaczynski were the heads of Poland’s army and navy, its central bank governor, lawmakers and members of the presidential administration.

The Polish leader was running late for a planned ceremony in nearby Katyn forest marking the 70th anniversary of the murder of some 22,000 Polish army officers and intellectuals there by the Soviet NKVD secret police.

During the Moscow meeting, Ivanov and Miller praised cooperation between their countries as transparent and unprecedented. Handing over the copies will help Poland with its own investigation and analysis of the crash.

Ivanov said that under an international agreement on plane crash investigations, not all data can be made public before the case is closed, including communication between the pilots and control towers.

Miller told reporters after the meeting that the sides had agreed there would be no “surprises” when it comes to publication of information, adding however that it is up to Warsaw to decide which data should be made public.

Miller said: “The Russian side will be informed in advance, but we do not need consent to make this public.”

Poles will elect a new president on June 20. Kaczynski’s twin brother Jaroslaw is running for the post but is expected to take second place behind Bronislaw Komorowski, the candidate of Tusk’s centrist ruling Civic Platform.

Two killed in Mexico plane crash

Mexico City, May 29 (IANS) At least two people were killed Friday when a small plane crashed in Mexico, authorities said.

According to the public security ministry, the four seater Cirrus plane crashed in the mountain range of Xalatlaco municipality, 70 km west to Mexico City, Xinhua reported.

So far, rescuers have found the corpses of a man and a women, who are yet to be identified.

Nine-year-old plane crash survivor has been told his family is no more

London, May 15 (ANI): The lone survivor of the Libyan plane crash that left 103 people dead, nine-year-old Dutch boy Ruben van Assouw has been informed that he is the only surviving member of his family.

The boy is reportedly coping well under the adverse circumstances.

“We have explained to Ruben exactly what happened,” said a statement from the boy”s aunt and uncle read out to media in Tripoli. “He knows that his parents and his brother are dead.”

“The time ahead will be a difficult period for us,” the statement said. “We hope that the media will respect our privacy,” The Telegraph reports.

There has been an outpouring of support for the little boy who has lost his parents and brother in the crash. The Libyan Organization for Children is going out of its way to ensure that the boy is able to recover from the trauma. He is being treated at the Tripoli Hospital and is recuperating after surgery was performed on his smashed legs.

Earlier Ruben told a Dutch newspaper he was “fine” but could remember nothing of the crash.

“My name is Ruben and I am from Holland,” he told the Telegraaf newspaper in a telephone conversation.

“I am fine, but my legs hurt a lot,” the boy said.

“I am in a hospital,” Ruben said. “I don”t know how I got here, I don”t know anything more. I really want to go home,”

The boy and his family were returning to Tripoli from a South African safari holiday, when they boarded the ill-fated Afriqiyah Airways flight that disintegrated upon landing on Wednesday. (ANI)

Dutch boy unaware of being lone Libyan plane crash survivor

Tripoli (Libya), May 14 (ANI): Nine-year-old Dutch boy Ruben van Assouw managed to make it out of the crashed Afriqiyah Airways Flight 771 with two broken legs, but what he does not know still is that he is the only one to have survived out of the 104 on board.

The boy”s aunt and uncle, who traveled to Tripoli from the Netherlands to bring him home, visited his hospital room on Thursday morning.

He immediately recognized them and smiled when they came in, according to Dutch officials.

“His memory is good: as soon as his relatives walked in he smiled, and was happy to see them,” Dr. Siddiq ben Dilla was quoted by a foreign news agency, as saying.

Dutch Foreign Ministry official Ed Kronenburg said the boy remains dizzy from the after-affects of anesthesia.

“He hasn”t been told yet, as far as we know, that his parents died,” he added.

He may go home as soon as the weekend.

Dutch officials said the family has asked the media to leave them alone, despite the global interest in and sympathy for the miracle survivor. (ANI)

Delaying Polish funeral over ash cloud “last resort”

Delaying Sunday’s planned funeral for Polish President Lech Kaczynski because of a volcanic ash cloud hanging over Europe would be a “last resort”, an official at the presidential administration said on Friday.

Jacek Sasin, who had earlier mooted the possibility of a delay, said senior officials would meet later on Friday to analyse the situation and would then make a final decision.

The huge ash cloud has spread across northern Europe since the volcano began erupting on Wednesday, closing airports and stranding hundreds of thousands of travellers.

U.S. President Barack Obama and dozens of other world leaders are due to attend Kaczynski’s funeral at Krakow’s Wawel cathedral in southern Poland. Krakow airport was was one of only two in Poland still open on Friday morning because of the cloud.

“A scenario to delay (the funeral), that kind of scenario does not exist. It’s not being discussed… This would be the last resort. For now we’re monitoring the situation,” Sasin told reporters.

“This afternoon there will be a meeting at the prime minister’s office and I believe the decision will be made then.”

Kaczynski, his wife and scores of senior Polish officials were killed in a plane crash last Saturday, plunging Poland into deep mourning.

The White House said late on Thursday Obama’s weekend trip to Poland was, for the moment, expected to go ahead despite the ash.

“It’s something that we are keeping an eye on. Right now, our schedule is still on. We have every intention of making it to Poland,” Deputy White House Press Secretary Bill Burton told reporters.

He said he had spoken to U.S. Air Force officials, adding: “They felt confident that they’ll be able to make that trip, but it’s something we’re watching and obviously cognizant of.”

Volcanic ash contains tiny particles of glass and pulverised rock that can damage engines and airframes.

Polish authorities had intended to fly the coffins of the First Couple to Krakow on Saturday afternoon after a planned memorial service in Warsaw. They are currently on public view in the presidential palace.

Apart from Obama, Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Britain’s Prince Charles, Spain’s King Juan Carlos and many other heads of state and government and royalty were due to attend the funeral.

(Reporting by Pawel Florkiewicz, writing by Gareth Jones; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Volcanic ash may force delay in Polish funeral

A huge ash cloud from an Icelandic volcano that has caused the closure of airports across northern Europe may force a delay in Sunday’s funeral for Poland’s President Lech Kaczynski and his wife, an official in the presidential administration said on Friday.

U.S. President Barack Obama and dozens of other world leaders are due to attend the funeral at Krakow’s Wawel cathedral in southern Poland. On Friday Krakow airport was one of only two in Poland still open.

“If this (volcanic ash) could affect events and if some participants are not able to arrive, then such an option (delay) could be considered,” Jacek Sasin, an official in the president’s chancellery, told RMF FM radio.

Kaczynski, his wife and scores of senior Polish officials were killed in a plane crash last Saturday, plunging Poland into deep mourning.

The White House said late on Thursday Obama’s weekend trip to Poland was expected to go ahead despite the ash, but U.S. authorities were keeping an eye on things.

“It’s something that we are keeping an eye on. Right now, our schedule is still on. We have every intention of making it to Poland,” Deputy White House Press Secretary Bill Burton told reporters.

He said he had spoken to U.S. Air Force officials, adding: “They felt confident that they’ll be able to make that trip, but it’s something we’re watching and obviously cognizant of.”

The volcanic ash cloud has caused huge disruption of air traffic across Europe, leaving hundreds of thousands of passengers stranded. It was not known how long the affected airports, including Warsaw, might have to remain closed.

Volcanic ash contains tiny particles of glass and pulverised rock that can damage engines and airframes.

Polish authorities had intended to fly the coffins of the First Couple to Krakow on Saturday afternoon after a planned memorial service in Warsaw. They are currently on public view in the presidential palace.

Apart from Obama, Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Britain’s Prince Charles, Spain’s King Juan Carlos and many other heads of state and government and royalty were due to attend the funeral.

(Reporting by Chris Borowski, writing by Gareth Jones; Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

Polish president poll seen on June 13 or 20-document

WARSAW, April 14 (Reuters) – Poland’s presidential election will take place on either June 13 or June 20 following the death of incumbent Lech Kaczynski in a plane crash, a parliamentary document said on Wednesday.

“According to the law on choosing the president of Poland, there are now two possible dates to conduct the first round of the election, June 13 or June 20 2010,” the document said.

Acting President Bronislaw Komorowski is expected later on Wednesday to hold consultations with political parties and to name the date of the election. (Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska, writing by Gareth Jones; Editing by Jon Boyle)

Poles queue for hours to mourn president, first lady

WARSAW, April 14 (Reuters) – Poles queued in the rain for several hours on Wednesday morning to pay respects to the late President Lech Kaczynski and his wife, Maria, whose coffins were displayed at the presidential palace.

The coffins went on public viewing on Tuesday after Kaczynski, his wife and 96 other passengers died in a plane crash on Saturday in western Russia.

“They loved one another so much, it was obvious when they lived and now they lie here together,” one mourner said.

On Wednesday morning the line stretched through much of the street to a nearby square and back to the presidential residence where people laid flowers and knelt in front of the coffins covered with Poland’s red and white flags.

“We just thought we should be here with our compatriots. It’s a historic moment,” said another man.

Since Saturday tens of thousands of people have also been lighting candles in front of the palace forcing security to fence the area.

Prime Minister Donald Tusk and members of his government will also hold an honour guard by the coffins for one hour later on Wednesday, local media reported. (Reporting by Gabriela Baczynska)

Polish zloty down vs euro, up on dollar after plane disaster

WARSAW, April 12 (Reuters) – The Polish zloty slipped against the euro PLNEUR=, but gained versus the dollar PLN= in early Monday trade, following wider market trends and proving mostly resistant to a weekend plane crash which killed the country’s president and a raft of other top ranking officials.

By 0552 GMT, the zloty fell 0.4 percent to the euro from Friday’s close and rose 1.2 percent versus the greenback, which suffered after euro zone finance ministers approved an aid plan for debt-stricken Greece.

Poland’s President Lech Kaczynski and central bank governor Slawomir Skrzypek perished on Saturday along with many of Poland’s top politicians and military officials when their plane crashed short of the runway in western Russia. (Reporting by Chris Borowski)

Russia’s handling of air crash lifts Polish hopes

(Reuters) – Vladimir Putin’s brotherly embrace of a tearful Polish prime minister was one of the most powerful images beamed from the site of Saturday’s plane crash that killed Poland’s president and many of the country’s elite.

World | Russia

Poles have been moved by the simple humanity displayed by Russia’s usually poker-faced prime minister as well as by many other gestures of solidarity from Moscow at their time of crisis and hope they may herald a wider improvement in long-strained ties with their giant neighbor and communist-era overlord.

Nobody expects Moscow and Warsaw to suddenly start agreeing on such vexed issues as missile defense, gas pipelines and troubled episodes from their long-shared history, but Polish President Lech Kaczynski’s untimely death in a Russian forest could reinforce a cautious rapprochement already under way.

“We did not expect this gentle, kind approach, this personal involvement from Putin,” said Witold Waszczykowski, deputy head of Poland’s National Security Bureau and one of the few Kaczynski aides not to have been on Saturday’s ill-fated flight.

“Naturally it will have a positive impact on the relationship between our countries. I can imagine a high-ranking Russian delegation from Moscow coming to Kaczynski’s funeral.”

His comments were echoed by Poland’s ambassador to Russia.

“We can sense Russian solidarity at every step of the way (since the crash),” Jerzy Bahr told Polish television.

Putin flew to Smolensk on Saturday to accompany Polish Prime Minister Tusk to the site where Kaczynski’s aged Tupolev plane had come down in thick fog, killing all 96 people on board.

“This is our tragedy as well. We are grieving with you, our hearts go out to you,” Putin told Polish television.

Russia declared Monday a day of national mourning for the crash victims. On Saturday, President Dmitry Medvedev made an unprecedented televised address to the Polish people.

KATYN

The state TV channel Rossiya was due to broadcast Polish director Andrzej Wajda’s film “Katyn” on Sunday evening. The film chronicles the massacre of 22,000 Polish military officers and intellectuals in 1940 by Josef Stalin’s NKVD secret police.

The much less-watched arts channel “Rossiya Kultura” became the first Russian television channel to air the film last week to coincide with the 70th anniversary of the massacre, which for decades Moscow had falsely blamed on Nazi Germany.

Katyn is an enduring symbol for Poles of their suffering at Soviet hands. Kaczynski and his entourage had been heading to Katyn to mark the anniversary when their plane crashed.

Last Wednesday, Putin impressed many Poles by acknowledging their pain over Katyn during ceremonies in the forest attended by Tusk and members of the Polish government.

“Putin and Medvedev are both trying to push forward the reconciliation impulse created by Tusk’s visit to Katyn,” said Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of the journal Russia in Global Affairs.

“I don’t expect any breakthrough (in bilateral ties). The relationship is very complicated, with animosities built over many centuries. You can’t rewrite history. But for the first time we can see political momentum from both the Russian side and the Polish side,” Lukyanov said.

Ironically, Kaczynski represented a conservative, nationalist-minded segment of the Polish public that remains deeply skeptical of Moscow 20 years after the fall of communism.

Kaczynski vocally opposed what he branded as Russian “imperialism” in ex-Soviet states such as Georgia and Ukraine, even braving bullets during Moscow’s short war with Tbilisi in 2008 to show his solidarity with President Mikheil Saakashvili.

Putin invited the pragmatic, quietly-spoken Tusk, not the more abrasive Kaczynski, to last week’s Katyn commemoration. Kaczynski decided to go anyway, but on a different day.

IMPORTANT PARTNER

With Kaczynski now dead and Acting President Bronislaw Komorowski, a close Tusk ally, tipped to win the presidency, analysts say efforts to repair economic and political ties between Moscow and Warsaw may accelerate.

But they stress that this has less to do with Saturday’s crash and much more to do with Moscow’s decision that it has to start treating Poland, its largest communist-era satellite and now a NATO and EU member, as a serious partner.

“Russia seems to have decided some time ago that it is too difficult to go over Polish heads in its dealings with the European Union or with Germany,” said Eugeniusz Smolar of Poland’s Center for International Relations.

That did not mean Russia would stop opposing U.S. plans for missile defense in Europe — a policy backed by Poland — or that Warsaw would end its support for EU and NATO expansion to take in Georgia and Ukraine despite Moscow’s fierce opposition.

“Moscow has realized that Poland is an important country and that it must adjust its approach accordingly,” Smolar said.

(Additional reporting by Conor Humphries in Moscow; Editing by Michael Roddy)

ANALYSIS-Russia’s handling of air crash lifts Polish hopes

WARSAW, April 11 (Reuters) – Vladimir Putin’s brotherly embrace of a tearful Polish prime minister was one of the most powerful images beamed from the site of Saturday’s plane crash that killed Poland’s president and many of the country’s elite.

Poles have been moved by the simple humanity displayed by Russia’s usually poker-faced prime minister as well as by many other gestures of solidarity from Moscow at their time of crisis and hope they may herald a wider improvement in long-strained ties with their giant neighbour and communist-era overlord.

Nobody expects Moscow and Warsaw to suddenly start agreeing on such vexed issues as missile defence, gas pipelines and troubled episodes from their long-shared history, but Polish President Lech Kaczynski’s untimely death in a Russian forest could reinforce a cautious rapprochement already under way.

“We did not expect this gentle, kind approach, this personal involvement from Putin,” said Witold Waszczykowski, deputy head of Poland’s National Security Bureau and one of the few Kaczynski aides not to have been on Saturday’s ill-fated flight.

“Naturally it will have a positive impact on the relationship between our countries. I can imagine a high-ranking Russian delegation from Moscow coming to Kaczynski’s funeral.”

His comments were echoed by Poland’s ambassador to Russia.

“We can sense Russian solidarity at every step of the way (since the crash),” Jerzy Bahr told Polish television.

Putin flew to Smolensk on Saturday to accompany Polish Prime Minister Tusk to the site where Kaczynski’s aged Tupolev plane had come down in thick fog, killing all 96 people on board.

“This is our tragedy as well. We are grieving with you, our hearts go out to you,” Putin told Polish television.

Russia declared Monday a day of national mourning for the crash victims. On Saturday, President Dmitry Medvedev made an unprecedented televised address to the Polish people.

KATYN

The state TV channel Rossiya was due to broadcast Polish director Andrzej Wajda’s film “Katyn” on Sunday evening. The film chronicles the massacre of 22,000 Polish military officers and intellectuals in 1940 by Josef Stalin’s NKVD secret police.

The much less-watched arts channel “Rossiya Kultura” became the first Russian television channel to air the film last week to coincide with the 70th anniversary of the massacre, which for decades Moscow had falsely blamed on Nazi Germany.

Katyn is an enduring symbol for Poles of their suffering at Soviet hands. Kaczynski and his entourage had been heading to Katyn to mark the anniversary when their plane crashed.

Last Wednesday, Putin impressed many Poles by acknowledging their pain over Katyn during ceremonies in the forest attended by Tusk and members of the Polish government.

“Putin and Medvedev are both trying to push forward the reconciliation impulse created by Tusk’s visit to Katyn,” said Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of the journal Russia in Global Affairs.

“I don’t expect any breakthrough (in bilateral ties). The relationship is very complicated, with animosities built over many centuries. You can’t rewrite history. But for the first time we can see political momentum from both the Russian side and the Polish side,” Lukyanov said.

Ironically, Kaczynski represented a conservative, nationalist-minded segment of the Polish public that remains deeply sceptical of Moscow 20 years after the fall of communism.

Kaczynski vocally opposed what he branded as Russian “imperialism” in ex-Soviet states such as Georgia and Ukraine, even braving bullets during Moscow’s short war with Tbilisi in 2008 to show his solidarity with President Mikheil Saakashvili.

Putin invited the pragmatic, quietly-spoken Tusk, not the more abrasive Kaczynski, to last week’s Katyn commemoration. Kaczynski decided to go anyway, but on a different day.

IMPORTANT PARTNER

With Kaczynski now dead and Acting President Bronislaw Komorowski, a close Tusk ally, tipped to win the presidency, analysts say efforts to repair economic and political ties between Moscow and Warsaw may accelerate.

But they stress that this has less to do with Saturday’s crash and much more to do with Moscow’s decision that it has to start treating Poland, its largest communist-era satellite and now a NATO and EU member, as a serious partner.

“Russia seems to have decided some time ago that it is too difficult to go over Polish heads in its dealings with the European Union or with Germany,” said Eugeniusz Smolar of Poland’s Center for International Relations.

That did not mean Russia would stop opposing U.S. plans for missile defence in Europe — a policy backed by Poland — or that Warsaw would end its support for EU and NATO expansion to take in Georgia and Ukraine despite Moscow’s fierce opposition.

“Moscow has realised that Poland is an important country and that it must adjust its approach accordingly,” Smolar said.

(For a main story on the crash pls click on [nLDE6390HJ])

(Additional reporting by Conor Humphries in Moscow; Editing by Michael Roddy)

No danger to Polish economy after plane crash-PM aid

WARSAW, April 11 (Reuters) – Poland’s economy was not endangered by the plane disaster which claimed the lives of the country’s president and dozens of top officials, an aid to the prime minister said on Sunday.

“We continue to monitor the situation and are ready to take various decisions. but we don’t expect anything dangerous for the Polish economy to happen,” Michal Boni told a news conference. (Reporting by Gabriela Baczynka)

From child star to president: Lech Kaczynski remembered

Lech Kaczynski, the Polish president killed in a plane crash on Saturday, was a child star who went on to form a formidable political double act with his identical twin Jaroslaw.

The Kaczynskis’ right-wing dramatics – obstinate, nationalist and often paranoid – shocked many in Poland and the rest of Europe, but caught a populist wave that propelled them to power.

Mr Kaczynski in 2005 became the nation’s third democratically elected president since the fall of communism in 1989, following in the footsteps of the legendary Lech Walesa and Aleksander Kwasniewski.

He had been expected to stand for re-election in a presidential poll due later this year.

Born in Warsaw in 1949, Lech and his elder twin by 45 minutes were inseparable as children. The two played the title roles in a film, The Little Hoodlums Who Tried to Steal the Moon, when they were 12.

They both studied law at the University of Warsaw, were together in the anti-communist opposition and also when the Solidarity trade union was born. Both were close to Solidarity’s founder, Mr Walesa, in the 1980s.

Once communism was toppled in Poland in 1989, each was elected senator in the country’s first free elections after World War II.

In 2001, the Kaczynskis founded the conservative Catholic Law and Justice (PiS) party, which Jaroslaw leads as Poland’s parliamentary opposition having previously served as his brother’s prime minister.

“My brother has always pushed me to the fore. He prefers staying behind the front line, from where he can lead our political party,” Lech once told AFP in an interview.

Although even close co-workers were known to have difficulty telling them apart, Lech insisted he and Jaroslaw were “not totally identical”.

Lech was married to Maria, who also perished in Saturday’s crash in western Russia. The couple had one daughter, Marta, born in 1980.

Lech had distinctive moles on his face and for a while had a moustache, making it easier to tell him apart from his twin, who has always been clean-shaven.

“In political terms, we share the same opinions, the same patriotism as our parents, who fought in the resistance in World War II,” Lech had said.

He also highlighted one of the political advantages of having a twin. “You always have a colleague or boss you can count on.”

He has based his campaigns, both to become Warsaw mayor in 2002 and the nation’s president in 2005, on his record of fighting corruption.

He favoured strong ties with the United States and was an enthusiastic supporter of Washington’s plans for a missile defence system on Polish soil, a project vehemently opposed by Russia.

Mr Kaczynski had vowed to protect Poland’s best interests while favouring reconciliation with historic foes and neighbours Germany and Russia.

“I want good relations with Moscow but Russia has to recognise that Poland is no longer in its sphere of influence,” he has said.

As mayor of Warsaw, Mr Kaczynski commissioned a report into the destruction wrought by Nazi Germany on the Polish capital during World War II, as a rebuttal to a demand for compensation from ethnic Germans expelled from Poland during the war.

The report put a price tag of $US45.3 billion on the damage done to Warsaw, which the Germans reduced almost entirely to rubble when they realised they were losing the war.

‘True Territorian’: second crash pilot farewell

The funeral of Shane Whitbread, one of the pilots who was killed in last week’s plane crash at the Darwin Airport has been held in Darwin this morning.

Shane Whitbread died when the Embraer Brasilia he was in banked sharply just after take off, and then crashed into bushland.

He was 50-years-old and leaves behind a wife and two boys.

A packed congregation at St Peter’s in Nightcliff was told of Mr Whitbread’s dedication to his family.

Cherie Whitbread said her husband told her he “loved her everyday” and that he always had time for his two young boys.

“Shane told me he loved me everyday, and he never misses an opportunity to compliment me,” Mrs Whitbread said.

His brother, Greg Whitbread spoke about his brother’s love of flying and being a “true blue Territorian”.

“His work desk was the plane’s cockpit,” he said.

“No one can be sure what happened in those few seconds after take-off.

“The authorities will go through all the information and come up with a finding in due course.

“But nothing they say, or do, will change what’s happened.

“We have lost a loving husband, father, son, brother and mate.”

The congregation also heard Mr Whitbread was heavily involved in Masters Sport and local cricket, despite having “dodgy knees”.

Airnorth chief executive, Michael Bridge said Mr Whitbread was a talented pilot, whose death has left a hole in the small company.

Greg Seymon, who was also killed in the crash, was farewelled at a funeral in Darwin yesterday.

A preliminary Australian Transport Safety Bureau report into the crash is due in the next month.

Funds to boost Kokoda Track safety

The Australian Government is providing another $3 million to improve safety along the Kokoda Track in Papua New Guinea.

Environment Minister Peter Garrett says the money will be spent on several projects including improved navigation for flights in and out of Kokoda.

It will also provide for upgrades of roads and the Kokoda airstrip, as well as first aid training.

Earlier this month the Government spent $250,000 to improve the road that leads to the Kokoda Track.

Work on the safety upgrades began after 13 people, including nine Australians, were killed in a plane crash near Kokoda last August.

Four other Australians died while walking the 96-kilometre mountain track last year.

Abu Dhabi wealth fund MD missing in Morocco plane crash

The managing director of Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA), considered the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund, is missing after a glider plane crash in Morocco, the state news agency WAM said on Friday.

Sheikh Ahmed bin Zayed al-Nahayan is also a member of the Abu Dhabi royal family.

“Sheikh Ahmed bin Zayed al-Nahayan … was in a crash of a glider which was airborne in Morocco. The pilot was rescued and is in good condition and the search for His Highness is still continuing,” WAM said in a statement.

Investigators examine black boxes from fatal crash

The black box recorders from the burnt out wreckage of an Airnorth plane that crashed on Monday have arrived in Canberra for analysis.

Two Airnorth pilots, Shane Whitbread and Greg Seymon, were killed after their 30-seat Embraer 120 aircraft crashed into trees shortly after take-off.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau says it will release its preliminary findings into the crash in a month.

Meanwhile, one of the pilots killed in Monday’s plane crash in Darwin has been described as a “true Territorian” who loved the outdoors.

Shane Whitbread’s friend, Anthony Harrison, says it has been difficult dealing with the tragedy.

“He loved his fishing and his outdoors,” Mr Harrison said.

“He loved his boys and his wife big time.

“So yeah, basically, that’s the make up of the man.

“He was a true Territorian. A very nice man.”

Pilots performing high-risk move before crash

Airnorth says the two pilots who died in a plane crash in Darwin on Monday were performing a high-risk training manoeuvre at the time of the accident.

The airline has confirmed Greg Seymon and Shane Whitbread were performing an “engine cut out on take-off” manoeuvre when their plane crashed in bushland at an Air Force base outside the city.

The training move is designed to simulate one engine of a twin-engine aircraft failing on take-off where planes reach a speed in which they cannot stop and must continue to climb.

Airnorth chief executive Michael Bridge says pilots perform the move twice a year in training.

“It’s obviously one of the highest-risk manoeuvres,” he said.

Mr Bridge said the company was moving to introduce training simulators and it was possible the two pilots were performing the move for the last time in the company’s history.

The Australian Transport Safety Bureau, meanwhile, says it will focus its investigation on the type of training regime the pilots were performing.

The bureau’s investigator in charge, Alex Hood, says his seven-strong team spent today assisting police and the victim identification team.

He says the bureau has moved into the investigation phase and is retrieving the flight data and cockpit voice recorder.

Mr Hood says the sharp left roll of the plane that caused it to crash is characteristic of an engine-out manoeuvre.

However he says a mechanical or systems failure could also be the cause.