| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing.
 It is merely a summary.
 
 ICTY Weekly Press Briefing 
 Date: 30.06.2004
 
 Time: 12.00 p.m.
 
 
 Registry and Chambers: 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers,made the following statement:
 
 Good afternoon,  
 First, on behalf of the Tribunal, I would liketo express condolences to the families, friends and colleagues of
 those killed in the helicopter crash in Sierra Leone yesterday.
 
 The President of the Tribunal, Judge Theodor Meron,yesterday addressed the Security Council in New York pursuant to
 the requirements of Security Council resolution 1534, which asked
 the Tribunal to provide, by 31 May 2004 and every six months thereafter,
 "assessments by its President and Prosecutor, setting out
 in detail the progress made towards implementation of the Completion
 Strategy of the Tribunal, explaining what measures have been taken
 to implement the Completion Strategy and what measures remain to
 be taken, including the transfer of cases involving intermediate
 and lower rank accused to competent national jurisdictions."
 
 We distributed the texts of the President’s andProsecutor’s speeches yesterday evening, but those of you who do
 not yet have copies can get them from the Press Office after this
 or find them on our website.
 
 As you know, the Defence Case in the Milosevictrial will commence this Monday 5 July at 9 a.m. in Courtroom I.
 It will run on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week from 9
 to 1.45 p.m. The following week it will run from Tuesday 13 July
 to Thursday 15 July at the same times, and the following week to
 revert back to Monday, Tuesday and Thursday. We will keep you informed
 of any changes to that schedule.
 
 I would recommend that journalists have a lookat the ‘Omnibus Order on Matters Dealt with at the Pre-Defence
 Conference’ issued by the Trial Chamber on 17 June by way of
 preparation. In it, you will see that among other things, the Trial
 Chamber has allowed Mr. Milosevic to make an opening statement at
 the commencement of his case for up to four hours. Copies of the
 Order can be obtained on request from my office and is available
 on our website.
 
 The period for media to accredit themselves forthe start of the Milosevic Defence Case comes to an end at 3 p.m.
 tomorrow. The list of journalists granted accreditation will be
 posted on our website at around 5.30 p.m. tomorrow, so those of
 you who are granted a place in the public gallery can pick up tickets
 at the advertised times. I would make a plea for those who can to
 pick up their tickets on Friday to do so and avoid a last minute
 rush on Monday morning.
 
 
 Finally, with regard to the start of Milosevic’sDefence Case, we are obviously expecting the appearance of many
 more journalists than usual at the beginning of next week. Since
 space will be at a premium, we would kindly and politely ask you
 to try to keep your rooms as tidy as possible and to respect others’
 space by sticking to the desks and areas assigned to you, where
 possible.
 
 
 On behalf of the Tribunal’s Outreach Programme:
             
 
 From Friday 25 June until Monday 28 of June, Judges from the SpecialCourt for Sierra Leone were in The Hague, participating in a working
 visit to the ICTY. The visit was organised and supported by the
 War Crimes Studies Center and Human Rights Center of the University
 of California, Berkeley and the International Center for Transitional
 Justice, in association with the ICTY Outreach Programme.
 
 The comprehensive programme included presentations by Judges, seniorICTY representatives, members of the ADC and experts from the University
 of California, Berkeley. Topics that were covered included an examination
 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and experiences in their
 application, managing the trial in multiple defendant trials, case
 management, managing the courtroom, victims and witnesses issues,
 jurisprudence, theories of liability and elements of the crimes.
 The successful visit concluded with a Judges roundtable, co-chaired
 by the Registrar, in which Judges from the SCSL, the ICC and the
 ICTY all participated.
 
 
 In terms of court documents:  
 
 I would draw your attention to the ‘Decisionof the President on the Application for Pardon or Commutation of
 Sentence of Miroslav Tadic’ handed down on 24 June 2004, in
 which President Meron dismissed Miroslav Tadic’s application for
 pardon or commutation of sentence. The detailed reasoning of the
 Decision is available on request.
 
 In terms of the remainder of the court schedule: 
 
 There will be a status conference in The Prosecutorv. Mitar Rasevic on Friday 9 July at 9 a.m. in Courtroom II.
 
 
 There will be a status conference in The Prosecutorv. Kordic and Cerkez on Wednesday 21 July at 9 a.m. in Courtroom
 III.
 
 Seealso the latest ADC-ICTY press briefing.
 
 
 Office of the Prosecution: 
 
 Florence Hartmann stated that the address madeby the Prosecutor to the UN Security Council yesterday is available
 by request or on the website.
 
 Questions: 
 	Asked if the Prosecutor had received any reaction to her statementto the Security Council that the Tribunal stay open until the main
 indictees had been arrested, Hartmann answered that she did not
 know exactly what was talked about at the Security Council meeting
 yesterday. She stated that the request was also shared by the President
 that we could not close the Tribunal’s doors until the main indictees
 were tried. This was something that had been said also by different
 governments.
 
 	Hartmann added that the OTP would work to get the arrests assoon as possible. If in December 2008 it was not complete, then
 the OTP would ask that the Tribunal continue in its work to complete
 a sentence or a decision against Karadzic, Mladic, or such indictees
 at large.
 
 	A journalist pointed out that the Prosecutor expressed optimismthat Karadzic would be arrested by the end of June. Asked if this
 optimism still stood, Hartmann replied that yesterday in New York
 that the Prosecutor stated there was still 24 hours left. An arrest
 warrant was still valid and an arrest could happen at anytime, she
 said.
 
 	Hartmann further stated that the OTP had been informed thatsome measure was to be taken against the local authorities in Bosnia
 because they had failed to arrest Karadzic and Mladic and other
 remaining fugitives. Officially there was an OHR press conference
 in Sarejevo now, she said. There was strong pressure on local authorities
 to make an arrest and as they failed to act, sanctions were being
 taken by the international community.
 
 	Asked if the Prosecutor was undermining an arrest of Karadzicor Mladic by her statement and possibly giving a warning to the
 indictees, Hartmann replied that there was no secret operation either
 now or yesterday and that it did not risk anything because there
 were no moves being made by RS authorities.
 
 	Asked if the statement the Prosecutor had made risked her credibility,Hartmann said that the Prosecutor was optimistic and would stay
 optimistic that Karadzic, Mladic, and other indictees would be in
 The Hague. Hartmann added that the Tribunal did not have their own
 police and depended upon other people to make these arrests. Therefore,
 specific days or hours of the arrests could not be secured, and
 that they would not give up until the trials and investigations
 were conducted. Hartmann then stated that they were spending all
 their days trying to secure the arrests.
 
 	Hartmann said that there were specific requests by individualswho had influence in Bosnia. Either SFOR who had competency over
 the arrest, or the OHR who had competency over the local authorities
 who were due to arrest fugitives, exerted pressures in order to
 secure the arrests by the end of the month. Hartmann pointed out
 that Bosnia was a candidate for the Partnership for Peace Programme
 and that NATO had made it clear that it would lose the opportunity
 to become a member this year if the indictees were not arrested.
 She said that the Prosecutor had been optimistic that Bosnia would
 move on the issue, but that did not happen. So, now there was decision
 making by the OHR because they did not deliver, Hartmann said.
 
 	Landale added that in fact it had been almost 9 years sinceboth Mladic and Karadzic had been originally indicted and that it
 was high time that they were transferred to the Tribunal. Landale
 said that the President had made it absolutely clear that the Tribunal’s
 work would not be done until those individuals mentioned time and
 time again by the Tribunal and the Security Council -- Karadzic,
 Mladic, Gotovina – as well as others, were transferred.
 
 	Asked how confident she was that these indictees were in Bosniaand not another state, Hartmann replied that there were fugitives
 in other states like Serbia and Montenegro and Bosnia crossing borders,
 and that was why the authorities in Bosnia should secure the border.
 Each time there was pressure or risk for these fugitives, they fled
 to the other side of the border, and if there was full cooperation
 this would not be a problem because they would be arrested on either
 side. Hartmann said that the indictees were moving to areas where
 there was no respect for the obligation to transfer, and that the
 problem was a problem of non compliance with the legal international
 obligation.
 
 	Asked where Milan Babic had spent his 211 days already served,Landale replied that he had no comment.
 
 Documents: 
 The Prosecutor v. Miroslav Tadic 
 
 24 June 2004 "Decision on the President onthe Application for Pardon or Commutation of Sentence of Miroslav
 Tadic". 4pg
 
 
 The Prosecutor v. Vidoje Blagojevic et al 
 
 28 June 2004 "Defendant Dragan Jokic’s Noticeof Disclosure of Military Expert Witness Report Under Rule 94 bis."
 55pg
 
 
 29 June 2004 ""Defendant Dragan Jokic’sNotice of Disclosure of Military Expert Witness Report Under Rule
 94 bis." 127pg NB. BCS version and revised English
 translation of above document. Please only request one of them.
 
 
 The Prosecutor v. Momir Nikolic 
 
 28 June 2004 "Momir Nikolic’s Motion for Leaveto File Rejoinder to Parts of the Prosecutor’s Reply in Relation
 to her Motion to Strike Parts of Defence Appeal Brief and Evidence
 not on Record." 5pg
 
 
 The Prosecutor v. Vojislav Seselj 
 
 10 June 2004 "Defence Motion for a Rulingon the Rights of the Accused to Communication and Visits While in
 Detention." 23pg
 
 
 14 June 2004 "Defence Motion for ProvisionalRelease." 23pg
 
 
 18 June 2004 "Prosecution’s Appeal from the"Decision on Motion by Vojislav Seselj Challenging Jurisdiction
 and Form of Indictment"." 46pg
 
 
 The Prosecutor v. Zeljko Mejakic et al 
 
 24 June 2004 "Prosecution’s Request for Certification."5pg
 
 
 The Prosecutor v. Jadranko Prlic et al 
 
 21 June 2004 "Prosecution Response to theAccused Valentin Coric Application for Provisional Release."
 10pg
 
 
 The Prosecutor v. Slobodan Milosevic 
 
 29 June 2004 "Prosecution Motion for OrderConcerning Accused’s Continued Non-Compliance with Trial Chamber
 Orders." 3pg
 
 
 The Prosecutor v. Mirko Norac 
 
 23 June 2004 "Order Assigning a Case to aTrial Chamber." 2pg
 
 
 24 June 2004 "Motion Opposing Decision forFirst Appearance." 3pg
 
 
 28 June 2004 "Order Assigning a Pre-TrialJudge." 1pg
 
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