Gulf Today

EU’S Tusk testifies in ‘10 presidenti­al plane crash case

Ex polish premise testifies in defense of his ex-chief of staff facing allegation­s of negligence, dismisses suggestion­s that the crash was same sort of conspiracy in which either he or Russia's Putin were involved

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WARSAW: European Union (EU) President donald tusk, a former polish prime minister, testiied in a Warsaw court on Monday in defence of his former chief of staff facing allegation­s of negligence in connection with the 2010 crash of a Polish presidenti­al jet in Russia.

Tomasz Arabski, Tusk’s chief aide at the time, is being sued for negligence by relatives of some of the victims of the crash that killed then president Lech Kaczynski and all 95 others on board.

Arabski previously denied the allegation­s, testifying that he had no role in organising the light to an airstrip near the western city of Smolensk.

The crash occurred in heavy fog as the presidenti­al delegation was heading to a commemorat­ion in Russia’s Katyn forest for thousands of Polish army oficers killed by Soviet secret police in 1940 − a massacre the Kremlin denied until 1990.

Testifying as a witness, not as a defendant in the case, Tusk − who served as Polish prime minister between 2007 and 2014 − also insisted that as premier, he was not responsibl­e for organising such lights.

“I wasn’t politicall­y responsibl­e for organising this visit... It’s not in any measure the role of the prime minister to handle organisati­onal details,” Tusk told judges at the hearing in Warsaw regional court.

“I continue to have a very high opinion about the quality of (Tomasz) Arabski’s work,” Tusk said.

The case was one that should be evaluated by the prosecutor’s ofice, Tusk said.

He also dismissed suggestion­s that the crash was some sort of conspiracy in which either he or Russian President Vladimir Putin, who was Russian Prime Minister at the time of the crash, was involved.

“I dealt with drasticall­y unfair accusation­s that I and Putin orchestrat­ed an attack,” Tusk told the court.

Last August, Tusk said he was being targeted in a separate Polish probe into the crash following a marathon eight hours of questionin­g by prosecutor­s in Warsaw.

Tusk’s allegation came as his political arch-rival Jaroslaw Kaczynski − the powerful leader o the governing rightwing Law and Justice (PIS) party and the late president Kaczynski’s identical twin − said the former premier “had plenty to fear”.

Tusk’s testimony comes as Warsaw is trying to ind a solution to a high-pitched dispute with the EU over its controvers­ial judicial reforms, denounced by Brussels as violating the rule of law.

 ??  ?? Donald Tusk
Donald Tusk

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