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Here is one take on the crash, which occurred as these officialswere travelling to attend memorial ceremonies at Katyn, the site of the massacre of 22,000 Poles by Soviet terrorist operatives 70 years ago. LINK
And another take on the mighty coincidence is here from the blogger at governemntagainstthepeople.wordpress.com:, with links to two articles that confirm that Poland was about to weaken it's currency to improve it's export trade.
There's no telling if the two events are connected, but their timing is mighty interesting.
The Polish government and the National Bank of Poland, in a
"rare moment of unity," agree to weaken Poland's currency,
the zloty, in an act that would benefit Poland's exporters at the expense of Poland's trading partners--that is, the European Union, among others. Then, the next day, Poland's president and the president of its national bank die in a plane crash.
From the Wall Street Journal in an item dated April 9, 2010:
In one of those rare moments of unity, the National Bank of Poland and the Polish government agreed on the need to weaken the Polish zloty, which over recent weeks has rebounded close to its pre-crisis strength. The currency's strength is now seen a possible threat to economic recovery. After several verbal interventions over the past few days, the central bank intervened with real money Friday, for the first time in more than a decade.
The bank followed through on its Thursday warnings that it is "technologically and psychologically" prepared to enter the currency market to prevent "excessive strengthening of the zloty." Government officials also said earlier this week that the "strong zloty" is damaging growth and, after Friday's intervention, said they fully back the central bank's move.
In moving to weaken the zloty, Poland's leadership was placing
the interests of the people of Poland ahead of the interests of the
European collective known as the European Union.
Then, the next day, the president of Poland dies in a plane crash along with numerous other top leaders, including the president of the National Bank. From the Mail Online:


