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Poles demand Britain hands over secret papers on war leader's death



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Published Date: 05 December 2008
THE Polish government is to demand access to classified British documents as part of criminal investigation into the death of the country's wartime leader.
A resolution passed by the Polish parliament, which obliges the government to ask for the secret files, called on Britain to "as quickly as possible declassify and grant access to any documents relating to the circumstances surrounding the death of G
eneral Wladyslaw Sikorski".

The general, who was the Polish prime minister and commander-in-chief, died when his RAF Liberator crashed into the sea seconds after taking off from Gibraltar in July 1943.

Despite a British wartime inquiry attributing the cause of the crash to a technical malfunction, speculation has abounded for decades that the Polish leader was assassinated.

The conspiracy theories have been fuelled by certain British files relating to the case remaining top-secret, although 65 years have passed since the tragedy.

"Without those documents we will never get the whole truth into the death of Gen Sikorski," said Zbigniew Girzynski, a Polish MP who has spearheaded the campaign to get access.

Earlier this year, Poland launched a criminal investigation into the accident, and last week experts exhumed the general's body from a crypt in Krakow's cathedral to ascertain whether he died by accident or was murdered.

Some historians argue that Gen Sikorski could have been killed by either Britain or the Soviet Union, both of whom may have seen his demands for Polish rights and independence as an unwanted impediment to good relations between the allies.

Historians point to the fact that the general had been the subject of two assassination attempts, both involving his aircraft, before his visit to Gibraltar, and that many mysteries surround the fatal crash.

The Czech pilot, the sole survivor, was found wearing his Mae West lifejacket – despite it being known that he habitually never wore one – and the plane had waited an unusual length of time at the far end of the run way before it began its take off.

At Gibraltar, due to the special treatment accorded to VIPs, there was uncertainty about who had boarded the plane and its cargo – and thus the identity of the bodies recovered.

The body of Sikorski's daughter, Zofia, was never found, and there were reports in 1945 that she was spotted in a Soviet Gulag by a member of the elite Polish commandos.

By 2000, only a few British intelligence documents relating to Gen Sikorski's death had been declassified. The majority are to remain secret for the next 50 to 100 years.

One recently declassified briefing paper was dated 24 January, 1969, to the British Cabinet Secretary, Sir Burke Trend, from Sir Robin Cooper, a former pilot employed in the Cabinet Office.

After reviewing the wartime inquiry's findings, he wrote: "Security at Gibraltar was casual, and a number of opportunities for sabotage arose while the aircraft was there."

Although Sir Robin doubted sabotage had taken place, or that the pilot had crashed the aircraft deliberately, he went on to add: "The possibility of Sikorski's murder by the British is excluded from this paper. The possibility of his murder by persons unknown cannot be so excluded."

The crash of the Liberator is portrayed in the 1958 film The Silent Enemy, in which the team of divers charged with retrieving his briefcase from the wreck is led by Lionel "Buster" Crabb, himself later to disappear in 1956 in mysterious circumstances while diving in the vicinity of a visiting Soviet warship.

In 1968 Soldiers, a play by a German writer staged in London, alleged that Winston Churchill had been in on the plot.

FACT BOX

• General Wladyslaw Sikorski wanted to be buried in a "free Poland".

• When he died in a plane crash off Gibraltar in 1943, aged 62, his body was flown to Britain and buried in a Polish war cemetery in Newark, Nottinghamshire, along with 500 comrades.

• His remains were repatriated in 1993 when hundreds of Polish and British servicemen attended a requiem mass. The cortege travelled to the RAF base, where the coffin, draped with the Polish flag, was put on a horse-drawn carriage.

He was laid to rest in a tomb in Wawel Cathedral in his native Krakow.







The full article contains 715 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 December 2008 11:09 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 05/12/2008 02:51:22
The fact that the English government still classifies files from the Second World War implies that they have something to hide; and it is obviously nothing to do with state security.

We know that a lot of the cover-up involves the German connections of the so-called "English" royal family, but there is obviously a lot more to it than that.

They are even more secretive than the Russians, so they obviously have a lot of dirty dealings to hide. It's way past time that all war time documents were made available to the public.
2

2Right,

On Location 05/12/2008 04:45:49
There is no such thing as FOI requests.

Documents should be open like the Dunblane fiasco.

God even our PM had to reveal why he went to war with Iraq.

Hand all documents over.

http://shirleymckie.myfastforum.org/forum1.php

Openness and accountability are a must
3

,

05/12/2008 05:11:14
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

Jim A,

05/12/2008 06:40:23
"THE Polish government is to demand access to classified British documents as part of criminal investigation into the death of the country's wartime leader.

DEMAND, whatever happened to asking politely.
5

Guga II,

Rockall 05/12/2008 07:58:50
#4 Jim A.

They have asked, politely, before, and been refused. What are the English government trying to hide????
6

Jim A,

05/12/2008 09:06:30
#5 Guga, the documents are what, over 60 years old, the government probably didn't know they even existed until the Poles asked for them. There are probably lots of secrets from the war years that have been hushed up and mostly forgotten about.
7

danielrober,

05/12/2008 09:52:28
For too long, too many British governments have been played as piggy in the middle between German and Russian competition. After all its 'insane' that we are the only government still affected by WWII in Europe. The consequences for the UK have been economic, for Poland - repeated invasion.

Best just release the info, have no more of it and get on with our lives. Let Poland, Germany and Russia find some peace, after the untold millions died in Eastern Europe and Russia. If releasing info helps them, then that's a good thing for the Baltic Sea region.
8

Mcsnagpile,

05/12/2008 09:57:34
We failed to liberate Poland after the war.
We covered up the Russian murder of thousands of Polish officers and blamed it on the Nazi until the 1980's.
We said nothing about the ethnic cleansing and Russianisation of Northern Poland.
Not to mention Gulags??
What else?? more than we want to know.
9

,

05/12/2008 14:53:38
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
10

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 05/12/2008 16:10:06
5 Guga II

For once I heartily agree with you and wonder just WHAT is the British government trying to hide and what famous people are being protected?
11

drahcir,

06/12/2008 01:19:08
yea, documents are to remain secret for 50 to 100 years. that there alone proves their guilt. the USA government did the same with president kennedy's paperwork. they want to make sure everybody's dead when the truth comes out. hopefully, the living generation will hold the governments accountable, because that's all that will be left.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jrfG2r4bTOc

goldieshouse.piczo.com
12

P. Lee,

06/12/2008 05:02:15
#8 Mcsnagpile
Rubbish
13

James Donald,

Newbridge 07/12/2008 16:47:48
#12 P. Lee - "Rubbish" - Care to elaborate? Britain went to war in 1939 because of Poland, yet by 1945 the Poles had exchanged Nazi slavery for Communist tyrany.
The Katyn massacre was the work of the NKVD and yet the fiction that it was the work of the Germans (including show trials) was maintained until the 1980s in certain quarters in the West and in the Warsaw Pact countries.
Part of Poland was indeed annexed by the Soviet Union (the part they occupied when they carved the country up in collusion with the Germans in 1939)and Poles were expelled to occupy land taken from the Germans.
I can't see any "rubbish" in Mcsnagpile's post - perhaps just facts that don't suit your political views.

 

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