| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date:
 13 September 2000
 
 Time:
 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Jim
 Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers made the following statement:
 
 
 TheJudges of the Tribunal will be holding a plenary session this afternoon here
 in The Hague to examine in detail the issue of compensation for victims. This
 matter had been previously discussed at the 13 July Plenary and following that
 by the Rules Committee, however it was felt that more time was needed to explore
 the issue. We will issue a press release on the results of the plenary tomorrow.
 
 
 On12 September, Trial Chamber I issued a scheduling order for the Krstic trial,
 which sets out in detail a time frame for the remainder of the trial. The schedule
 stipulated is as follows:
 
 
 -27September 2000, 1530 hrs: status conference (if required);
 
 -5October 2000, 1530 hrs: pre-defence conference;
 
 -16to 20 October 2000, 25 to 27 October 2000, and 30 October to 3 November 2000:
 first defence case session;
 
 -20to 24 November 2000, 27 and 28 November 2000 and 4 to 8 December 2000: second
 and final defence case session;
 
 -22to 26 January 2001: prosecution evidence in rebuttal;
 
 -5to 9 February 2001: defence evidence in rejoinder;
 
 -21February 2001: filing of the parties’ final trial briefs; and,
 
 -26February to 2 March 2001: closing arguments.
 
 
 Copiesof this order will be made available after this briefing.
 
 
 On11 September, Trial Chamber III issued its decision on Miroslav Tadic’s application
 to provisionally leave his residence for a medical examination in Banja Luka
 granting him leave to do so under certain specific conditions.
 
 
 TheTrial Chamber had previously denied Tadic's applications to travel to Belgrade
 for medical examinations on 29 June 2000 and 27 July 2000.
 
 
 Theconditions specified by the Trial Chamber are as follows:
 
 
 (1)Tadic may leave the municipality of Bosanski Samac to travel to the Clinical
 Hospital Centre in Banja Luka and receive the specified medical examination
 for a period of seven consecutive days in September.
 
 (2)During this time, Tadic must continue to report to the local police in Bosanski
 Samac every day. However, if hospitalisation is required, Tadic shall report
 each day for the duration of that period from the Clinical Hospital Centre by
 telephone to the police in Bosanski Samac.
 
 
 Wehave also received a copy of a supplement brief from a military expert witness
 for the defence in the Foca trial, General Radinovic, who testified on 11 July
 2000, as well as some Prosecution expert witness statements in the Kvocka and
 others trial. These documents will be available to you on request.
 
 
 Also,courtesy of the Outreach Programme, the 18th Edition of the Tribunal’s Rules
 of Procedure and Evidence are now available in BCS.
 
 
 Finally,copies of the newly revised Status of Cases fact sheet are now available. This
 gives a brief summary of all cases before the Tribunal and is updated on a weekly
 basis. It is produced by the Legal Unit of the Public Information Services.
 
   
 
 OFFICEOF THE PROSECUTOR
 
 Paul Risley, Spokesman for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) made the following
 announcement:
 
 
 	TheProsecutor is in the office today.
 
 
 	Regardingthe reports of the arrests in Croatia, I can confirm that Ivan Andabak was under
 summons from the Tribunal for questioning by the staff of the Prosecutor. The
 assistance of Croatia in facilitating such an interview was requested by the
 Prosecutor. Following his arrest, an interview of Ivan Andabak by the Prosecutor’s
 staff was carried out yesterday.
 
 
 	Thereare no indictments by the Tribunal of the persons reported as having been arrested
 by Croatia. These arrests are a Croatian matter and questions should be directed
 to them.
 
   
 
 QUESTIONS: 
     	Askedto comment on alleged reports that the Croatian authorities would like the
 Tribunal to try the two people previously apprehended by Croatia, one being
 Ante Sliskovic, Risley replied that there were no indictments for any of
 the persons arrested including those two persons. The OTP was reviewing
 information provided by the Croatian authorities regarding them.
     Askedwhether Ante Sliskovic was summoned to answer questions by the OTP, Risley
 replied that generally speaking in regards to all of these arrests, the
 OTP could have an interest in questioning persons other than Andabak.
     	Askedto confirm reports that Ignac Kostroman was also arrested at the request
 of the Tribunal, Risley replied that the OTP might have an interest in interviewing
 other persons under arrest including Kostroman. He confirmed that Andabak
 was interviewed yesterday based on a request from the OTP. He added that
 as far as he was aware, this was the only summons the OTP had sent to the
 Croatian authorities.
     	Askedwhether the OTP had attempted to speak to General Andabak before they issued
 the summons and whether General Andabak was aware of the summons on him,
 Risley replied General Andabak was aware that he was under summons. Risley
 concluded that this was the reason a request was made to the Government
 of Croatia to facilitate such an interview.
     Askedwhether a case completed by the Tribunal could be reopened if any of these
 arrests or the documents found in Tudjman's archives brought forward new
 evidence, Risley replied that it was too early to ask such a question. He
 added that the meetings held in the Tribunal on Friday and on Saturday morning
 with Deputy Prime Minister Granic and Minister of Justice Ivanisevic were
 directly related to the issue of OTP access to witnesses, documents and
 evidence. On both of those very important matters agreement was reached
 and yesterday and today’s activities in Zagreb could be seen as a direct
 outcome of the successful talks.
     	Askedwhether General Andabak was one of the individuals that the OTP had sought
 access to, Risley replied that he was.
     	Askedto confirm that General Kostroman was not arrested at the request of the
 Tribunal, but that the Tribunal was interested in him, Risley replied that
 this was correct. All he could say was that General Kostroman was not under
 a summons for interview, but General Andabak was.
     	Askedwhether the Croatian media reports were correct that there were two arrests,
 Risley replied that he was aware of an apparent contradiction in the reports.
 He added that for General Andabak there was a specific summons for an interview
 outstanding. There was not such a summons for interview on any of the other
 persons who were reported under arrest.
     	Askedwhether that meant that General Andabak was going to be released once the
 interviews were concluded or whether the Croatian authorities were also
 interested in him, Risley replied that this was a question for the Croatian
 authorities.
     	Askedwhether the Tribunal had further interest in speaking to General Andabak,
 Risley replied that the OTP had an open investigation, however, the question
 of whether he would be released was a question for the Croatian authorities.
     	Askedto confirm that the OTP only asked the Croatian authorities to summon Andabak
 and not to arrest them, Risley confirmed that this was the case. The OTP
 had asked for the Croatian Government’s assistance in bringing about this
 interview.
     	Askedwhether it was therefore the Croatian authorities’ choice of means by which
 to act on this summons, Risley replied that it was.
     Askedto confirm reports in Croatia and Serbia in which he was quoted as saying
 that the OTP had secretly indicted KLA members including Thaci and Ceku
 and that there were five separate incidents involving the KLA, Risley replied
 that during the Prosecutor’s last trip to Kosovo at her press conference
 in Pristina she announced that her office was investigating alleged crimes
 committed by the KLA in 1998 in Kosovo.
 
   Whenasked for elaboration from reporters the Prosecutor had said that specifically
 her investigators would look into five separate alleged incidents. This was
 the only detail provided. Any response as to who the individuals were who
 might ultimately be charged under such an investigation was pure speculation,
 he added.
 Risleyadded that this investigation as a whole only began several months ago. It was
 therefore very early to think of who the ultimate targets of such an investigation
 would be.
   	Askedwhether it was true that Ceku was under investigation and possible secret
 indictment for crimes committed in Croatia because he was allegedly a senior
 ranking officer, Risley replied that as always the answer to this question
 was that he could not confirm or deny the investigation of a specific individual
 with regards to an open investigation by the OTP.
     Askedfor a comment on an article in a Banja Luka magazine which printed a list
 of 35 Bosniaks supposedly indicted or under investigation by the Tribunal,
 Risley replied that the Prosecutor during her last visit to the region in
 Sarajevo made public that there was an investigation into alleged crimes
 committed against Bosnian Serbs in the period of conflict in Bosnia.
 
   Noindictments had been revealed or issued publicly with regards to that investigation,
 he added. He reiterated the OTP’s interest in bringing charges against the
 senior most individuals responsible for specific crimes carried out during
 a period of conflict. This was why the publication in this magazine in Banja
 Luka, both last week with a list of 30 people allegedly under sealed indictment
 and this week with 35 people, was shear speculation, he said. The mandate
 of this Tribunal was to look for those senior most persons responsible for
 a crime, he concluded.
   	Askedto comment on reports quoting the Deputy Prosecutor as saying that Karadzic
 might be arrested before the elections, Risley replied that he was sure that
 the Deputy Prosecutor would strongly assert the compelling need for Radovan
 Karadzic to be arrested based on his public indictment.
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