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Polish opposition leader Kaczynski stripped of resistance over scuffle

Polish lawmakers voted on Friday to raise nationalist opposition leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski's resistance from prosecution, implying he can deal with charges associating with a scuffle during a celebratory occasion for an air catastrophe.

Activist Zbigniew Komosa implicates Kaczynski, leader of the Law and Justice (PiS) celebration, of assault, saying he hit him twice in the face during an anniversary ceremony of the air crash in Smolensk, Russia, in which Kaczynski's twin sibling and president of Poland, Lech, and 95 others were killed in 2010.

Kaczynski said Komosa had consistently brought wreaths with offensive inscriptions to the Smolensk monolith in Warsaw and that he was acting in self-defence.

The crash in thick fog near Smolensk was Poland's worst air disaster considering that World War 2 and stunned the country. It likewise deepened political departments and revived suspicions about Russia, Warsaw's former Cold War master.

Kaczynski and his supporters believe the crash was not caused by pilot error, as concluded in a main investigation by Poland's centrist government, however by foul play and Russian interference. Russia rejected any participation.

Kaczynski's immunity as a legislator has been stripped just regarding Komosa's charges.

(source: Reuters)