Friday, January 30, 2009

Polish experts have not found signs of the assassination of General Sikorski.

   Polish experts have not found evidence of the murder of the deceased in 1943 in a plane crash, Prime Minister of Poland, General Wladyslaw Sikorski. This January 29, reports Associated Press.
General body was exhumed in November 2008 due to the fact that the specialists of Institute of National Memory decided to check the fairness of rumors about the involvement of the Soviet authorities in the death of Sikorski. The study showed that the prime minister died from multiple injuries, which are typical for a fall from height. He had broken ribs, arms, legs, spine and skull. Bullet wounds, strangulation or poisoning, experts have not found.
Now the Institute of National Memory intends to investigate the causes of the crash, which killed Sikorsky. According to the staff of the institute, the collapse of the aircraft could be the result of sabotage.
During the Second World War, Sikorsky was led by the Polish Government in exile based in London. He often criticized the Soviet authorities, and accused the Soviet Union in the shooting of Polish officers captured by Katyn. In the USSR until the collapse of the country considered to be the official version, according to which the Poles in 1940, the Germans shot.
British Air Force plane, which was Sikorsky, crashed July 4, 1943. British law enforcement authorities conducted an investigation and concluded that the plane of unknown reasons, has become unmanageable. The only people vyzhivshy in a plane crash, Czech pilot, said that the aircraft was damaged wheel.

No comments: