Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo has been hospitalised with minor injuries after a car struck her government vehicle in the southern city of Oswiecim, a government spokesman said.
"Prime Minister Beata Szydlo is in good condition. She will undergo additional routine tests in Warsaw," government spokesman Rafal Bochenek said in a tweet on his official Twitter feed.
The 53-year-old prime minister was riding in a motorcade yesterday when the Fiat vehicle struck, forcing her car off the road where it crashed into a tree. Two security agents were also injured.
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He declined to say how many days Szydlo is expected to spend in hospital.
Szydlo was being transferred by helicopter to a Warsaw hospital late yesterday where she is expected to remain under observation.
State prosecutors have opened an investigation into the crash.
"We're with you Beato and we're sure that after a brief stay in hospital, you'll be back with us again leading the government," Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the powerful head of Szydlo's rightwing Law and Justice (PiS) party, told supporters at a memorial meeting in Warsaw.
The gatherings are held each month for his late twin brother, former president Lech Kaczynski, who died in a 2010 jet crash in Russia.
The car crash was just the latest road incident involving a senior Polish government official.
Szydlo was unscathed when several cars in her official motorcade were involved in a crash in Jerusalem during a November visit to Israel.
Defence Minister Antoni Macierewicz also escaped injury last month when his official vehicle was caught in a pile-up of several cars on an icy highway.
President Andzej Duda was unhurt when he ended up in a road-side ditch last March after a tyre on his official limousine blew.
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