| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 19.02.2003
 
 Time: 12:10
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
  ChristianChartier, Head of the Public Information Services, made the following announcement:
 
 
 Good afternoon to you all.For a change, I would like to give the floor immediately to the Office of the
 Prosecutor, namely Jean-Jacques Joris for an important announcement.
 
 Jean-Jacques Joris, theadvisor to the Prosecutor, made the following statement:
 
 
 
 “The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) confirms
 that Fatmir Limaj was arrested at 5.42 p.m. (local time) on Tuesday 18 February
 by the Slovenian authorities in Kransjka Gora. Fatmir Limaj was brought at 7.10
 p.m. before a Judge of the Higher Court in Kranj, prior to being detained in
 Radovlijca.
 Following the arrest ofthe accused, the ICTY is making arrangements for the speedy transfer of Fatmir
 Limaj to the Detention Unit of the Tribunal.
 The Office of the Prosecutorwishes to commend and to thank the Slovenian authorities for their remarkably
 swift and efficient cooperation”.
 Now turning to other matters.The Prosecutor was in Belgrade, Podgoridca and is now in Skopje and I believe
 that you all have read what she said at a press stake out in Belgrade and Podgoridca.
 In Belgrade, she reminded in clear terms that cooperation was and remains insufficient.
 There has basically not been any progress since her last address to the Security
 Council regarding arrest and transfer of indictees, regarding the difficulties
 we still experience in access to sources of evidence in general and particularly
 archives documents and the difficult legislation of the waivers for the witnesses
 in the Milosevic Trial. So, nothing new regarding Serbia and Montenegro. As
 for Montenegro, the Prosecutor highlighted that she had received some valuable
 important documents but of course Montenegro did not hold much in comparison
 to Belgrade. Regarding the arrest of fugitives it is the assessment of the Prosecutor
 that Montenegro could do more since some of our indictees are reported on and
 off to be in Montenegro.
  REGISTRY AND CHAMBERS   Christian Chartier thenretook the floor and delivered the following statement:
 Following the conferencethat took place in Sarajevo in the middle of January between the OHR and the
 ICTY, on the prosecution of war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the next round
 of talks will take place tomorrow and Friday, at the Tribunal. An OHR delegation,
 led by Ambassador Fassier, Senior Deputy High Representative, will meet with
 ICTY representatives from the Presidency, the OTP and the Registry. Their discussion
 will focus on the estimation of costs attached to the establishment and functioning
 of a Specialized Chamber within the State Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
  With regard to developmentsrelated to on-proceedings:
  The Initial Appearanceof the three accused who were transferred yesterday afternoon has been scheduled
 and will take place on Thursday 20 February (tomorrow) at 2.15 p.m in Courtroom
 I, before Judge Liu.
 Also tomorrow, a hearingwill be held at 3 p.m. to hear arguments with regards to the Motion for Provisional
 Release filed on 27 January by Dusko Knezevic. On 14 February the Trial Chamber
 ordered the attendance of the Liaison Officer of Republika Srpska, M. Trivun
 Jovicic.
 A Status Conference hasbeen rescheduled in the case The Prosecutor vs. Tihomir Blaskic. Judge Fausto
 Pocar, Pre-Appeal Judge, scheduled this conference for Friday 28 February at
 4.30 p.m.
 
 
 
 Finally, with regard to recent decisions issued by the Chambers, the following
 are brought to your attention:
    Earlier this week, theAppeals Chamber (Judge Hunt, Presiding; Judge Güney, Judge Gunawardana,
 Judge Pocar and Judge Meron) dismissed the appeal of Vidoje Blagojevic against
 the renewed dismissal of his request for provisional release on 19 November
 2002 by Trial Chamber II. The Appeals Chamber held that the Trial Chamber
 had again failed to take the Republ ika Srpska’s guarantee into account, and
 then determined for itself that, notwithstanding the validity of that guarantee,
 it was not satisfied that Blagojevic would appear for trial if provisionally
 released.
 
  On 14 February, TrialChamber I Section A (Judge Liu, Presiding; Judge Clark and Judge Diarra) issued
 an order to the parties in the case The Prosecutor vs. Naletilic and Martinovic
 to file “detailed sentencing submissions” by the end of this week. The Chamber
 considered that neither the parties’ final written submissions as well as
 their closing arguments failed to meet the requirements of Rule 86 (C) and
 101 (B), setting forth their obligation to address matters of sentencing and
 factors to be taken into consideration by the Chamber.
 
 On 13 February, Trial
 Chamber III (Judge May, Presiding; Judge Robinson and Judge Kwon) dismissed
 the Motion by Dragoljub Ojdanic challenging the jurisdiction of the Tribunal
 on persons who are alleged to be members of a joint criminal enterprise. The
 Trial Chamber based its Decision on the Appeals Chamber’s jurisprudence.
 
 In order to
 save time for the Q & A session, other Decisions, Orders and legal filings
 by the parties are listed on a separate page (please find attached).
  Questions:    A correspondent remarkedon the problems the OTP had with waivers for witness in the Milosevic trial,
 referring to the former Yugoslav President Lilic who mentioned this problem
 himself in the Courtroom, asked whether Joris could tell the media who the other
 potential witnesses in the Trial were?
 
 Joris replied that he couldnot and added that he had omitted to mention one point regarding the general
 themes of non-cooperation. He stated that Minister Mihailovic last week publicly
 said that Serbia and Montenegro would not accept any new Indictments and would
 not transfer any citizens to The Hague.
 
 Asked whetherthe Tribunal could confirm that Seselj would come to the Tribunal on 24 February
 as he had reported himself in the media, both Joris and Chartier said that they
 could not confirm this but that Seselj was welcome since he had been indicted
 last Friday. His arrival at the Detention Unit should already have taken place
 and could take place any time.
 
 
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