| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date: 11
 April 2001
 
 Time: 11:30
 a.m.
 
 
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Jim
 Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 
  There will be an extraordinary plenary session of the judges of the ICTY tomorrowThursday 12 April, where modifications will be discussed to the Rules of Procedure
 and Evidence following the adoption by the Security Council of resolution 1329.
 As well as making the necessary preparations for the arrival of the ad litem
 judges, the discussions will include the use of Senior Legal Officers for pre-trial
 management and the granting of greater powers to the judges.
 
 
 Interms of court documents, on 9 April a motion for separate trial was filed by
 Biljana Plavsic, because "she will not have adequate time and/or resources
 to prepare for the trial as currently scheduled".
 
 
 Wealso received the Prosecutor’s pre-trial brief in the Bosanski Samac case on
 9 April. Copies of both these documents and the latest status of cases fact
 sheet will be available after this briefing.
 
 
 Finallya reminder that Friday and Monday are an official UN holidays.
 
   
 
 OFFICEOF THE PROSECUTOR
 
 Jean-Jacques Joris, Advisor to the Prosecutor, made no statement.
 
   
 
 QUESTIONS: 
 
 
   	Askedfor clarification of the issue of greater power for judges, which would be
 on the agenda at the next plenary, Landale replied that this issue was, among
 other things, to do with being able to regulate the number of witnesses that
 either party could call. This would ensure that there was a sensible and appropriate
 number of witnesses being called by both parties and not endless lists of
 witnesses who might all be testifying as to the same facts. He added that
 it was aimed at streamlining the procedures, making them as effective as possible.
 Any announcements from the plenary would be forwarded as soon as possible,
 he concluded.
 
   Asked whetherthe renovation work being carried out in the Tribunal Lobby was being done
 in expectation of the arrival of Mr. Milosevic and whether any special renovations
 were being made to the Detention Unit, Landale replied that the work in the
 lobby had nothing to do with the pending arrival of Mr. Milosevic. He added
 that the Detention Unit had the facilities and capability to receive any accused.
 Slobodan Milosevic was no different, he concluded.
 
   	Asked fora summary of the results of the visit of the Registrar to Belgrade and whether
 there had been any change in the position of Belgrade to the request from
 the Tribunal that Milosevic be transferred to The Hague without delay, Landale
 replied that he had nothing specific to report. He added, however, that the
 Tribunal was watching the situation closely.
 The main purposeof the visit, which was successfully accomplished, was the serving of the
 arrest warrant to Minister Grubac, the Federal Minister of Justice, and
 obtaining from him the commitment that this arrest warrant would be served
 on Mr. Milosevic. Landale could not say at this time whether this had actually
 happened, although, obviously, the Tribunal would be keen to find out.
 
 In additionto that, the Registrar had sought to obtain information as to the precise
 nature of the charges against Mr. Milosevic in the district court in Belgrade.
 The information gathered from the meetings would be forwarded to the appropriate
 people within the Tribunal and an assessment would be made of that information.
 The Registrar also discussed the legal obligations the Belgrade authorities
 were under and the steps that needed to be taken in order to fulfill those
 obligations. As the Tribunal had said on a number of occasions, the authorities
 were under the obligation to transfer Mr. Milosevic promptly with due diligence
 and at the earliest opportunity, that remained the Tribunal’s position,
 he concluded.
 
 
   	Asked whatthe Prosecutor’s motives were for her change in position last week concerning
 the transfer of Milosevic to The Hague, Joris replied that he had answered
 this question last week, however he reiterated the fact that there was no
 real change in position. The emphasis was very clear. The legal position was
 that Milosevic must be transferred to The Hague immediately. This was the
 decision confirmed by the joint communiqué of the Prosecutor and the
 President last week, he concluded.
 
   	Asked toconfirm that there was no disagreement between the two sides of the Tribunal
 on this issue, Joris replied that the Prosecutor’s position had always been
 clear, that being a position based on the legal obligation of Yugoslavia.
 
 	Landaleadded that the President had also made it quite clear in the joint communiqué
 that he took the same position.
 
 
   	Asked tocomment on the fact that the Yugoslav Government, notably Mr. Djindjic, were
 clearly taking the opposite position, Joris replied that Mr. Djindjic had
 a political position and the position of the Tribunal was one purely based
 on legal principles. The view was based on the Statute and on the firm resolve
 of the international community that made it clear that Milosevic had to be
 transferred to The Hague. He believed that the legal position should prevail
 over political statements.
 
   	Asked aboutthe effect of the proposed new law, Joris replied that that was an internal
 legal discussion. As the Prosecutor had explained repeatedly, the law could
 clarify some internal procedures in Yugoslavia, as to who was in charge of
 what, who was responsible for receiving the request for cooperation and who
 was going to actually implement the arrest warrant. The law could be very
 helpful in clarifying the procedures, but one this should be made very clear,
 the absence of this law, or if the law was flawed, or not passed, in no way
 justified imperfect cooperation or the absence of cooperation, he added. Yugoslavia
 had to comply and cooperate, with or without a law, he concluded.
 
   	Asked whetherthis was a conflict between national and international law, Joris replied
 that it was not really because the Yugoslav constitution forbade the "extradition"
 of Yugoslav citizens to courts of foreign states. He added that in this case
 we were not dealing with a court of a foreign state, we were dealing with
 an international court and as distinguished lawyers and law experts in Yugoslavia
 had rightly pointed out in January and at the end of last year, it would be
 possible to cooperate with the Tribunal without a law and without violating
 the provisions of the Yugoslav constitution. Beyond the very legitimate and
 useful issue of setting procedures for cooperation there was no problem if
 there was not a law.
 
   	Asked fordetails of the copy of the draft law given to the Registrar during his visit
 to Belgrade, Landale replied that there were no details that he could give
 at the moment. He added that it was given to the Registrar in cyrillic and
 it was being translated and examined at the Tribunal. Any comment made would
 probably not be made in public, but would be sent back to the authorities
 in Belgrade.
 
   		Askedwhether, if the Prosecutor received no cooperation from the Yugoslav authorities
 before her visit to New York in May, she would propose some action to be taken
 against the FRY, Joris replied that at this stage it was still speculation.
 The purpose of the Prosecutor’s appearance before the Security Council was
 to report on her work and progress. Progress depended on the quality of cooperation
 the Tribunal received from states. Obviously if there was a case of non-compliance,
 it would be appropriate to report this to the Security Council.
 
   	Asked ifMilosevic was not in custody by May there could there be a case of non-compliance,
 Joris replied that we would see in May. The Prosecutor had always been very
 clear in her addresses to the Security Council, she would not fail to be clear
 this time either.
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