In Poland, meanwhile, some members of the late president’s Law and Justice party remained deeply suspicious of the Russian investigation. Jolanta Szczypinska, one of the party’s senior members, called for a nonpartisan, international commission to investigate.
Ms. Szczypinska, who gave up her seat on the ill-fated flight just hours before it took off, said she had been informed by Polish journalists at the crash site that Russian authorities had demanded that witnesses who had been waiting to greet the dignitaries hand over their cameras, cell phones and memory cards.
“I have flown many times on that plane and I knew the pilots, and I am convinced that it wasn’t a pilot’s mistake that led to this tragedy,” she said in an interview on Thursday. “It is disturbing the way the Russian side has been communicating, issuing statements and how they had their version of events from the beginning. It is very strange, and we expect answers.”
I AGREE:
CUI BONO?
PUTIN.
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