| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing.
 It is merely a summary.
 
 ICTY Weekly Press Briefing 
 Date: 14.04.2004
 
 Time: 12:00
 
 REGISTRY AND CHAMBERS
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following
 statement
 
 
 Good afternoon,  
 
 	 First, I am very pleased to be able to confirmthe Secretary-General’s appointment of Lord Bonomy to the ICTY to
 replace Judge May, who is resigning for health reasons. Lord Bonomy,
 who is a Judge of the Scottish Court of Session, will officially
 take up his duties on 1 June, 2004
 
 
 I would also like to remind you that the AppealsJudgement in The Prosecutor v. Radislav Krstic will be rendered
 next Monday, 19 April, at 11 a.m. in Courtroom I. You are all invited
 to attend.
 
 
 The closing arguments in The Prosecutor v. RadoslavBrdjanin will be held from Monday 19 April to Friday 23 April
 in Courtroom III.
 
 
 Finally, I’m sad to announce that this will beJoanne’s last briefing here at the Tribunal before she leaves us.
 I’m sure you will join me in thanking her for all her hard work
 and patience over the years, and in wishing her all the very best
 for the future.
 
 
 Questions: 
 
 Asked whether a new Judge had been assigned tothe Milosevic trial, Landale confirmed that upon effective entry
 into service, Lord Bonomy would be assigned by President Meron to
 Trial Chamber III.
 
 
 Asked to confirm that the new Judge would officiallytake up office on 1 June 2004, Landale replied that this was correct.
 
 
 Asked if he would have access to trial materialsbefore 1 June in order to prepare, Landale replied that he understood
 that he would.
 
 
 Asked, now that Lord Bonomy had been confirmedas the new Judge, when he was expected to arrive in The Hague, Landale
 replied that he was already here.
 
 
 Asked to confirm that, between now and June 1,Lord Bonomy would read through the trial papers, Landale said he
 believed this would be the case. He added that according to the
 Rules, Lord Bonomy would have to certify that he had familiarized
 himself with the record of the proceedings, before he could join
 the bench of judges, according to Rule 15 bis.
 
 
 Asked what function Lord Bonomy would hold andwhether his assignment to Trial Chamber III meant that the Trial
 Chamber had to again decide who would be the presiding Judge, Landale
 replied that it was a matter for the Trial Chamber to decide. He
 added that at the moment Judge Robinson was the presiding Judge
 of Trial Chamber III.
 
 According to a journalist, the BBC had reportedthat Milosevic had filed his list of witnesses. Asked if he could
 confirm this, Landale replied that he could confirm that Milosevic
 had filed his list of witnesses and exhibit list pursuant to Rule
 65 ter (G). Those lists were now before the Judges for review,
 he added.
 
 
 Asked for an indication as to how long that processwould take, Landale replied that he did not have any firm indication.
 
 
 Asked to confirm that the list included 1,631 witnessnames, Landale replied that he could confirm that fact.
 
 
 Asked whether the witness list was confidentialat the request of the Defence, Landale replied that it was confidential
 because it was under review by the Judges.
 
 
 A journalist stated that there had been instancesin the past where witness lists had been made public, for example
 in the Blagojevic case when the Prosecution published the summaries
 that accompanied the witness list and the complete witness list
 before the Prosecution case began. Asked whether it would not be
 true to say that witness lists in general were always confidential,
 Landale replied that in this case the list was being reviewed by
 the Trial Chamber and was therefore confidential.
 
 
 Asked whether he could confirm that the names ofBill Clinton and Tony Blair were on the witness list, Landale replied
 that he had no comment regarding this question.
 
 
 Asked to confirm that the trial was going to continueon 8 June as previously scheduled, Landale replied that nothing
 had changed and that 8 June was the scheduled date for the start
 of the Defence case.
 
 
 Asked why they believed the amendments to the Rulesof Procedure and Evidence were adopted last week and how those amendments
 related to the Tribunal’s completion strategy, Landale replied that
 it was pursuant the latest Security Council resolution which called
 for indictments to be filed against only the most senior people
 most responsible for crimes that fell under the jurisdiction and
 Statute of the ICTY. He added that in order to align that with the
 ICTY Rules of Procedure and Evidence, the Judges had met in a plenary
 session last week and adopted the amendment to Rule 28. It was consistent
 with the Security Council resolution, he concluded.
 
 
 Asked how the amendment would affect the work ofthe OTP, Hartmann replied that it depended. She added that the Prosecutor
 was planning to ask the President for some clarification on the
 issue, for example with regards to the criteria to be used. The
 Decision was taken by the Judges and the Prosecution was not informed.
 
 
 Asked to confirm that the Prosecution was not informedin advance about the amendment to this Rule, Hartmann replied that
 they were not.
 
 
 A journalist stated that the amendment meant thatthe Judges had the final word regarding who would be indicted, not
 on the basis of the evidence that was in the indictment, but if
 they decided that this person was senior or not. Landale said that
 it was his understanding that it was part of the whole confirmation
 process, so based on whether or not there was a prima facie
 case and also taking into consideration whether this person held
 a most senior position. That would be for the Judges to decide,
 he said.
 
 
 The journalist went on to say that she did notunderstand why that was the case because the Prosecutor had already
 said that she was concentrating on the more senior individuals responsible.
 Asked why the Judges needed to add the resolution and a new set
 of Rules, unless they wanted to have more control over what the
 Prosecution was doing, Landale replied that the Judges felt that
 the Rules needed to reflect the direction in which the Security
 Council wanted this institution to focus its energies, so they had
 accordingly adopted the relevant Rule in the Tribunal’s Rules of
 Procedure and Evidence.
 
 
 A journalist read out the following paragraph froma letter from the French President of the Security Council "la
 France souhaite préciser que le nécessaire respect
 des dates d’achèvement des travaux du Tribunal Pénal
 International pour l’ex-Yugoslavie et du Tribunal Pénal International
 pour le Rwanda, dûment rappelé par la résolution
 1534, ne saurait être interprété comme portant
 atteinte au principe d’indépendance des deux tribunaux et
 à la séparation des fonctions en leur sein conformément
 aux dispositions pertinentes de leur Statut et de leur Règlement
 de Preuve et de Procédure respectifs".
 
 
 The journalist stated that he understood that thisletter from the President of the Security Council said that the
 new resolution should not be interpreted as a call to change the
 Rules or the Statute of the Tribunal. Asked if she felt this change
 was initiated by the Security Council, as the letter appeared to
 be a clear statement that it must be done within the existing Statute
 and the Rules, Hartmann reiterated that the Prosecutor would ask
 for some clarifications regarding criteria. She said that Security
 Council resolution 1503 of August 28 called on the Tribunal’s separate
 bodies to make sure that they indicted and tried the most senior
 people. The OTP believed it had said in its completion strategy
 (which was initiated by the Prosecutor before it was mentioned and
 the date settled in the UN Security Council resolution of 8 August)
 that it would focus on the most senior perpetrators. The most senior
 people did not necessarily mean that they should be Heads of State.
 It was something that had to be discussed, which was why the Prosecutor
 would ask for some clarification as to what they felt the most senior
 was according to their criteria, she concluded.
 
 
 Asked, following what was just read out, whetherit was in accordance with the letter and also whether the letter
 was in the spirit of the resolution to actually have consulted with
 the OTP before having introduced these changes, Hartmann replied
 that the OTP was not consulted.
 
 
 Asked why this was a total surprise for the OTP,Landale replied that he was not aware whether it was or was not
 a surprise to the OTP. He added that he could only discuss what
 he was aware of.
 
 
 Asked for confirmation of reports last week thatthe OTP was issuing more Indictments against high ranking Bosnian
 officials, Hartmann replied that she would not comment on allegations.
 
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