| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 14 July 1999
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Today, Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following
 announcements:
 
 On 12 July, TrialChamber II designated Judge David Anthony Hunt as the pre-trial judge in the
 Brdjanin case, pursuant to Rule 65 ter of the Rules of Procedure and
 Evidence.
 
 On 13 July, TrialChamber II issued a Corrigendum Order stipulating that Radoslav Brdjanins
 first name should be spelt with an o rather than an i.
 
 Also, I wouldlike to remind you that the Judgement in the Tadic appeal will be delivered
 tomorrow at 9 a. m.
 
   
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 The Deputy Prosecutor, Graham Blewitt, had no announcements to make.
 
   
 QUESTIONS: 
 Asked to confirmwhether or not there was a valid international arrest warrant issued for
 Arkan, Blewitt answered that there was not. He confirmed that he was aware
 of the MSNBC reports of Arkan seeking to surrender himself, but said that
 neither Arkan nor lawyer had been in direct contact with the Tribunal on
 this matter. Since his indictment, Arkans lawyer, Giovani di Stefano,
 who worked for the Dusan Lekovic Law Firm, had corresponded frequently with
 the Tribunal, but on no occasion had there been any talk of surrender, he
 said. Blewitt added that the Office of the Prosecutor would be in a position
 to accommodate his surrender if and when that happened.
 
 Continuing,Blewitt said that the Arkan indictment had been issued in 1997 and that
 since that time attempts had been made to arrest him. There were a number
 of arrest warrants, the primary one to the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
 (FRY). The indictment was sealed and so his lawyer would not have seen a
 copy of it, he said, adding that he would most likely have seen a copy of
 the arrest warrant as this was a public document. Blewitt rejected allegations
 in the media that Tribunal was not ready for Arkan and said that his office
 was ready to go to trial. He added that there had been a great deal of speculation
 in the article.
 
 Asked whetherthere had ever been any previous attempts to make a deal with the Tribunal,
 Blewitt said that there had not and that the only similar situation he could
 think of was with Drazen Erdemovic, who indicated his willingness to plead
 guilty. Once indicted, however, the Prosecutor had no power to make deals
 with the accused, apart from indicating to the Trial Chamber that the accused
 had indeed pleaded guilty and suggesting a more lenient sentence.
 
 Asked whethera more substantive incentive could be given to an indictee by the Prosecution
 to surrender, Blewitt replied that the legal obligation lay with the state
 to act on an arrest warrant. In the absence of state cooperation in Bosnia,
 SFOR had taken over. This had sometimes led to the accused or SFOR members
 being injured and so surrendering ensured no violence need occur, he said.
 No other incentives existed, he added.
 
 Asked aboutthe Prosecutors visit to Kosovo, Blewitt confirmed that the Prosecutor
 was in the early stages of her visit and had yesterday visited officials
 in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) in the morning and
 in the afternoon had met with the KFOR Commander, General Jackson, and other
 UN officials. She would be visiting some of the sites being investigated
 by her office today, he said.
 
 Asked forthe number of people working in Kosovo for the OTP at the moment, Blewitt
 said that the figures changed daily, with some teams doing short-term stays
 to be taken over by other teams. He estimated that currently there were
 around 50 people working in five teams for the OTP in Kosovo.
 
 Continuing,Blewitt said that KFOR were providing the security necessary for the teams
 to perform their jobs. He noted that the investigation teams would soon
 be allowing TV documentary crews on to the sites to film. This had been
 delayed in order to establish good liaison in the field with KFOR and to
 allow the teams to be established. One media team per site would be allowed,
 he added.
 
 Asked whetherthe latest discoveries in Kosovo would indeed lead to the OTP extending
 the Milosevic indictment to include genocide, Blewitt said that it could
 be extended, however it was premature to say. To prove genocide, it was
 necessary to establish that the intent was there to destroy in whole or
 in part an ethnic group. This evidence would come from sources other than
 the forensic pathology investigations, he added.
 
 Asked whyno international arrest warrant had been issued in Arkans case, Blewitt
 answered that, prior to March 1999, the indictment had been under seal.
 If an international arrest warrant had been issued, the indictment would
 no longer have been secret. Prior to the release of the arrest warrant,
 Arkans travel movements had been monitored in order to enable his
 arrest and an arrest warrant had been issued to Belgrade, as well as a number
 of other countries where arrests could be made. The OTP cooperated with
 Interpol, with all open indictments being automatically given to Interpol.
 Interpol then issued a red notice, which was then distributed
 around the world. Interpol had the authority to apprehend and detain an
 indictee until an arrest warrant was issued, he added.
 
 Asked aboutthe difference between an international arrest warrant and an Interpol red
 notice, Blewitt said that an international arrest warrant was an order
 direct from the Tribunal to each state, imposing on them an additional legal
 obligation. Each country was obliged under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter to
 act if they were in a position to do so. The existence of a red notice
 merely provided an alert if a particular person entered a states territory.
 Blewitt added that not all countries were members of Interpol and those
 that were, were not always willing to act on a red notice. There
 were therefore some differences between the two. However, if the Tribunal
 knew a person was in an Interpol member-state, they did not require an international
 arrest warrant for an arrest to take place. If the red notice
 was the only thing that existed, it was often sufficient for an arrest,
 he said.
 
 Asked whetheror not there was evidence of Arkan and his forces having been in Kosovo,
 Blewitt said that he was aware of the allegations in the media to that effect,
 but had no comment to make.
 
   Asked if hecould put a figure on the number of victims in Kosovo, Blewitt answered that
 it was too early to give figures. There was also a difference between those
 killed during the fighting between the Serb forces and the KLA, and innocent
 civilians being killed.
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