| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 22.10.2003
 
 Time: 12:20
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement
 
 Good afternoon,
   
 With regard tothe court schedule and in addition to the ongoing trials:
 
 A reminder thatthe sentencing hearing in the Mrdja case, will be held this afternoon in Courtroom
 I starting at 2.15 p.m. The hearing will continue tomorrow in Courtroom III
 starting at 2.15 p.m.
 
 There will bea status conference in The Prosecutor v. Mrksic, Radic and Sljivancanin this
 afternoon starting at 2.15 p.m. in Courtroom I.
 
 Tomorrow 23 Octoberin The Prosecutor v. Limaj, Bala and Musliu there will be a status conference
 in Courtroom I commencing at 3 p.m.
 
 In The Prosecutorv. Momir Nikolic, Trial Chamber I has ordered that the sentencing hearing
 be held on 27 and 28 October, from 3 to 6.30 p.m. in Courtroom I.
 
 In The Prosecutorv. Dragan Obrenovic, Trial Chamber I has ordered that the sentencing hearing
 be held on 29 and 30 October, from 3 to 6.30 p.m. in Courtroom I.
 
 In The Prosecutorv. Predrag Banovic, the Sentencing Judgement will be rendered on 28 October
 2003 in Courtroom III commencing at 3 p.m.
 
 On 17 Octoberin The Prosecutor v. Vojislav Seselj, we received an Order from Trial
 Chamber II scheduling a status conference for Wednesday 29 October 2003, commencing
 at 3 p.m. in Courtroom III.
 
 On 20 Octoberin the same case, the Accused filed his "Motion no. 21".
 
 On 20 Octoberin The Prosecutor v. Ranko Cesic, Judge Orie issued a "Scheduling
 Order for Submission of Pre-Sentencing Briefs and Sentencing Hearing",
 in which he ordered as follows:
 
     "TheProsecution and Defence shall, by Wednesday 12 November 2003, file all submissions
 and provide statements of any witnesses they might call in relations to
 the sentencing hearing; and
 The sentencing
 hearing be held on 27 November 2003 at 3.00 pm and continuing on 28 November
 2003 at 3.00 pm."
 On 17 Octoberin The Prosecutor v. Sefer Halilovic, Trial Chamber III issued its "Order
 Regarding the Start Date of the Trial", in which the Trial Chamber
 ordered that the trial commence on 19 January 2004.
 
 In The Prosecutorv. Miroslav Deronjic, Trial Chamber II has ordered that the sentencing hearing
 be held on 27 to 30 January 2004.
 
 In terms of othercourt documents:
 
 On 15 October,in The Prosecutor v. Slobodan Milosevic, we received the "Prosecution’s
 Motion for Leave to Add Witness Michel Riviere". The amici curiae filed
 their reply to this on 17 October. On 20 October, Trial Chamber III granted
 the Motion and ordered that Michel Riviere may be added to the Prosecution witness
 list.
 
 In the same caseon 17 October, President Meron issued his "Order Assigning Judges to
 a Case Before the Appeals Chamber". President Meron ordered that in
 considering the "Interlocutory Appeal by the Amici Curiae Against the
 Trial Chamber Order Concerning the Presentation and Preparation of the Defence
 Case Dated 17 September 2003", filed on 1 October, the Appeals Chamber
 shall be composed of Judges Meron (presiding), Pocar, Shahabuddeen, Schomburg
 and Weinberg de Roca.
 
 Again on 17 Octoberin the Milosevic case, Trial Chamber III ordered that during the testimony of
 Lord Owen on 3 and 4 November 2003:
 
   "the Witness
 may make a brief statement if he so chooses at the commencement of his testimony;
 the Prosecution
 shall then be entitled to cross-examine the Witness for a period of two hours;
 the Accused,
 on conclusion of the Prosecution’s questioning, shall be entitled to cross-examine
 the Witness for a period of three hours;
 the amici curiae
 shall thereafter be entitled to cross examine the Witness for a period of
 30 minutes; and
 the Trial Chamber
 may ask questions of the Witness as and when appropriate".
 
 On 20 October in this case, Trial Chamber III issued its "Decisionon Defence Motion Filed by the Defence of Franko Simatovic (IT-03-69-PT) For
 Access to Transcripts and Documents". This is a detailed Decision and
 I refer you to the text of document.
 
 On the same day in this case we received the "Prosecution’sSubmission of the Expert Reports of Helge Brunborg Pursuant to Rule 94 bis and
 Motion for the Admission of Transcripts Pursuant to Rule 92 bis (D)".
 
 On 21 October in the Milosevic case, from the Appeals Chamberwe received the "Dissenting Opinion of Judge David Hunt on Admissibility
 of Evidence in Chief in the Form of Written Statements".
 
 On 21 October in The Prosecutor v. Mitar Vasiljevic, theAppeals Chamber (Judges Meron, presiding, Shahabuddeen, Guney, Schomburg and
 Weinberg de Roca) issued its "Decision on Application for Admission
 of Additional Evidence", in which it dismissed the Defence Motion.
 
 On 13 October in The Prosecutor v. Naletilic and Martinovic,we received the "Consolidated Reply Brief of the Prosecution"
 and the "Book of Authorities For the Consolidated Reply Brief of the
 Prosecution".
 
 On 15 October in The Prosecutor v. Darko Mrdja, we receivedthe "Prosecution’s List of Sentencing Witnesses".
 
 On 16 October in The Prosecutor v. Mitar Rasevic, thePresident of the Tribunal, Judge Meron, rendered his "Decision on Assignment
 of Defence Counsel". For further details I refer you to the text of
 the Decision.
 
 On 16 October in The Prosecutor v. Blagojevic and Jokic,we received the "Prosecution’s Motion for Leave to Ask Leading Questions
 of Adverse Witnesses if Necessary".
 
 On 17 October in The Prosecutor v. Sefer Halilovic on the sameday, we received the "Prosecution’s Response to Defence ‘Request for
 Withdrawal From the Case".
 
 On 17 October in The Prosecutor v. Hadzihasanovic and Kubura,we received from Trial Chamber II an Order appointing Judge Antonetti as
 the pre-trial Judge in this case.
 
 On 17 October in The Prosecutor v. Kvocka, Radic, Zigicand Prcac, we received the "Request for Separation of Miroslav Kvocka’s
 Appeal Procedure".
 
 On 20 October in this case, the "Prosecution’s Responseto Defence Motion for Identification of Suspects and Other Categories Among
 its Proposed Witnesses" was filed.
 
 	Finally, we have copies of the Tribunal’s latest AnnualReport as presented by President Meron to the General Assembly on 10 October
 in New York.
 
 All the documents I’ve mentioned are available from us on request.
   
 	Florence Hartmann, Spokeswoman for the Office of theProsecutor, made the following statement:
 
 I would like to inform you about the Prosecutor’s upcomingvisit to the Balkans. Tomorrow, Thursday 23 October 2003, she will go to Pristina,
 where she will first meet with the Commander of KFOR and then with representatives
 of UNMIK. On Friday 24 October 2003, she will be in Sarajevo and Banja Luka.
 In the morning in Sarajevo she will meet with the EU Police Mission Commissioner
 and with the leadership of SFOR and OHR. In the afternoon in Banja Luka she
 will meet with the RS leadership, namely President Cavic and the Prime Minister.
 
 
 Questions: 
 
 A journalist stated that today the Foreign Minister of Serbiaand Montenegro reiterated that should General Mladic be arrested, the field
 for negotiations with the Hague Tribunal would open regarding the latest unsealed
 Indictment against Pavkovic and others. Asked for a comment on this, Hartmann
 replied that her answer remained the same as that which she had given yesterday
 regarding speculation and statements following the disclosure of the Indictment
 against Pavkovic and others.
 
 There was no field for negotiation regarding legal documentsincluding Indictments issued by the ICTY and arrest warrants relating to those
 Indictments, she said. They had to be acted upon according to the law. This
 was the case for anyone indicted by the ICTY.
 
 Mladic was one on the list of 21 current ICTY fugitives. Hewas famous. He was indicted for genocide in 1995. The names of Radovan Karadzic
 and Ante Gotovina were also regularly mentioned in documents. If those documents
 were read carefully, as Security Council resolution 1503 dated August 28 stated,
 there was always the need and obligation to arrest all fugitives, not only those
 regularly named.
 
 Landale added, as he had said yesterday, that there was a bindinglegal obligation on the authorities in Belgrade and the authorities across the
 former Yugoslavia to cooperate with the Tribunal, with its warrants of arrest
 and orders to transfer in good time, people indicted by the Tribunal. That was
 what the Tribunal expected to happen.
 
 Asked what the background was for three state officials fromSerbia to talk about possible negotiations, Hartmann replied that it was difficult
 to answer on their behalf. They should answer this question themselves. The
 feeling of the OTP was that it was their political hope, but the OTP was dealing
 with very precise rules and the Tribunal was not in a position to deal with
 political issues or political requests.
 
 The mandate of the Tribunal was very clear and the guidelinesof resolution 1503 were also very clear. Until the end of its investigative
 programme in 2004, (the first deadline established by resolution 1503, directly
 related to OTP matters) the OTP would continue to deal with all ongoing investigations
 related to high level people who could not and should not be tried locally.
 The four new accused were in fact described in the report of the Prosecutor
 presented before the Security Council as 1 of the 13 ongoing investigations.
 They were too high level to be dealt with by a local jurisdiction, she added.
 
 On the issue of crimes committed in Kosovo by Serbian forcesthere were many opportunities for the local jurisdiction in Serbia to initiate
 cases. The OTP now had the latest figures regarding the number of bodies exhumed
 in Serbia following the discovery in 2001 of mass graves in Batajnica and two
 other places in Serbia. 827 bodies were exhumed, there were therefore opportunities
 on this basis to initiate investigations and criminal cases which had not been
 the case until now. The only legal step that had been taken in Serbia was to
 lead the exhumations, but not, as yet, to initiate criminal cases.
 
 Asked to comment on other ‘secret promises’ supposedly madeby the Prosecutor to Serb officials, for example that there would be no more
 Indictments filed regarding command responsibility and another one apparently
 made to Minister Batic that the Prosecutor promised in March 2001 that she would
 shortly be bringing charges against Izetbegovic for crimes committed in Bosnia
 and Herzegovina, Hartmann replied that there was a certain amount of confusion
 concerning command responsibility on the part of local authorities, including,
 for example in the case of Sljivancanin.
 
 Public and government opinion in the region was that if theTribunal indicted someone of high level, (the kind of accused the Tribunal dealt
 with) it was done just because of their position, whether within the army or
 political body. This was not the case, she added. There was no question of deals.
 The Tribunal did not issue Indictments on the basis of command responsibility
 alone. Any high level person indicted, whether they held a high position in
 the army or in the government, was indicted because they had command responsibility
 but also individual direct responsibility.
 
  The OTP clarified these issues because local authorities inthe region were afraid. On certain occasions the local press had stated, for
 example, that the OTP was going to indict 100 high level Serbs. There are other
 examples relating to Croats. The OTP clarified that it would not indict everyone
 who was in a position during the 10 years the Tribunal was dealing with, but
 those who had command responsibility and also had direct individual responsibility.
 This was the case with this Indictment, she concluded.
 
 The journalist stated that perhaps it was not clarified wellenough because the authorities appeared to have the wrong impression. Hartmann
 replied that this was not fair to say. The OTP had clarified the situation but
 the authorities, it seemed, still wanted the Tribunal to stop all of its Indictments.
 She added that this was because they did not wish to fulfill all of the obligations
 they had towards the Tribunal. It was a comfortable statement to make to say
 that the Tribunal should not indict anyone from their region. A government who
 said this for their own accused was not using the same statement towards the
 accused of the other side. It was because they wanted to see less high level
 Serbs indicted. The same would be said if similar statements were made by another
 government. They did not want their own people to be indicted.
 
 She added to answer the second part of the question that Izetbegovicwas one of the suspects under investigation as part of the current investigations,
 but the fact that he had died meant that all legal proceedings against him were
 dropped.
 
 Asked to confirm that up until he died he was under investigation,Hartmann replied that this was the case.
 
 Asked whether the Prosecutor ever made promises during hermeetings as Batic had allegedly claimed, Hartmann replied that it was difficult
 to fight against this representation of the situation. The OTP did not indict
 because of political requirements. It conducted investigations which were opened
 only if it had enough elements to do so. These investigations were conducted
 until their end if there was enough evidence to bring an Indictment. This was
 the only criteria the OTP worked on. There was no negotiation. The problem was
 that the governments in the region expected the Tribunal, as representatives
 of the international community, to negotiate in the same way as governments
 or national organisations could to come to certain agreements. They were not
 happy that they could not negotiate with the Tribunal. This was why, sometimes
 when the Tribunal helped them by telling them what it was doing and what they
 had to expect in order to be prepared to do it, they still expected the OTP
 to accommodate them. When the Tribunal refused then there was a break in communication
 because they expected the Tribunal to negotiate. The Tribunal refused because
 it was not entitled to break the law, it was not entitled to negotiate.
 
 The relationship was sometimes affected by that. This was whathappened on 3 October when the Prosecutor took the Indictment to Belgrade. The
 Authorities there attempted to negotiate, the OTP could not. As a result, (as
 the Prosecutor told the Foreign Minister of the European Union in Luxemburg)
 a apparent operation to arrest an accused was stopped because they did not get
 what they wanted with regards to the Indictment served to them.
 
 Asked what they were trying to negotiate, Hartmann repliedthat they did not want the Indictment.
 
 Asked for more information concerning the Izetbegovic investigation,Hartmann replied that she could say nothing because the case would not be brought
 and he was not in a position to defend himself. Nothing else could be said,
 she concluded.
 
 A journalist stated that Florence had said that three of thefour accused on the new Indictment were believed to be in Serbia. Asked whether
 the OTP knew about the whereabouts of the fourth, Djordjovic, Hartmann replied
 that the four arrest warrants related to the Indictment were served to the authorities
 in Belgrade, to the President of the National Council for Cooperation, Mr. Svilanovic.
 The OTP had read the press statements claiming that one of the accused Djordjovic
 was apparently no longer in Serbia. The OTP expected, as well as the prompt
 arrest of the other three accused, that if this was the case the authorities
 would according to their obligations towards the Statute, inform the Tribunal
 about the fact that Djordjovic was not in Serbia and where he could possibly
 be, she concluded.
 
 Asked whether the fact that the OTP had stopped its investigationinto Izetbegovic, this reduced the number of ongoing investigations to 12. Hartmann
 replied that the Prosecutor in the report given to the Security Council on October
 9 gave a number of 13 investigations involving about 30 suspects. She added
 that she could not give details about the number of suspects on each of the
 investigations. The media knew some of the main issues of the investigations
 but she could not provide them with more details.
 
 Asked for a chronology of the process involving giving theIndictment to the Serbian authorities, Hartmann replied that the Prosecutor
 took the Indictment to Belgrade on October 3, 2003. It had been confirmed on
 the afternoon of October 2, 2003. The Prosecutor served the sealed Indictment
 to the authorities, which was a common way to do it. They were informed of the
 confidentiality of the document. The document was kept under seal. The prosecution
 requested the unsealing of the Indictment because it was disclosed in the Belgrade
 media. This did not cause any problems for the OTP, within the framework of
 the Rules, it was in a position to accommodate the authorities in keeping the
 Indictment sealed in order to make the arrest and transfer more comfortable.
 Sealing an Indictment could be a matter to be discussed with the authorities
 depending of the level of danger, or their will, but it did not change anything.
 A sealed Indictment was a valid Indictment. The date of the arrest warrant was
 not when it was disclosed to the public, it was when it was served to the authorities.
 They had failed until now to arrest them.
 
 The OTP had asked them to arrest them. The decision was madeto seal the Indictment to make it more convenient for them, they then took the
 contrary step of disclosing it to the press. After this the OTP had no more
 grounds to keep it sealed. The OTP was not willing to keep it sealed for long,
 because an Indictment should be sealed to assist the authority to act upon it,
 not to postpone action upon it.
 
 Asked whether the Prosecution were investigating any otherSerbs for Kosovo, Hartmann replied that she could not comment.
 
 Asked when the Izetbegovic investigation had begun and howclose the OTP were to filing an Indictment, Hartmann replied that she could
 not comment.
 
 Asked whether anything could be done to speed up the processfor giving witness statements to the media following the Milosevic case, as
 it was now very difficult to follow proceedings, Landale replied that the Press
 Office was trying to put a system in place which would allow the media to get
 the statements in good time, but it also had to protect any redactions and any
 protected information, and this was the problem. He added that there had been
 cases of a redaction being made to information within a statement during the
 course of the trial which then had to be reflected in the statements which were
 given out. That meant a process afterwards of them going through the statements
 to make sure that they were not being given out. The Press Office was making
 it a preoccupation to try to get a system to get the statements to the press
 as quickly as possible.
 
 The journalist added that receiving a statement the day afterthe witness had testified was worthless for journalist reporting on cases daily.
 Landale replied that he understood the journalists’ frustration. He added that
 the Press Office spend a great deal of time trying to get the statements to
 the press as quickly as possible. They were not sitting on desks gathering dust.
 The Press Office was pushing people as much as it could to get the statements
 to the media. If it could find a more streamlined, more effective way of doing
 this, it would do it. The journalists’ frustration had been noted, he concluded.
 
 Asked for a comment on Prosper’s statement concerning the fourgenerals and Mladic which seemed to be contrary to the position of the Tribunal,
 Hartmann replied that the OTP’s position had been clearly established and the
 UN Security Council resolution pointed out that they all had to be handed over
 to the Tribunal and that they would all be tried in The Hague.
 
 There were some possibilities of transfers to local jurisdictionsbut those figures were suggested in the programme of the Prosecutor before the
 Security Council and they related to certain Indictments issued by the ICTY
 which could be, if a War Crime Chamber at the Bosnia State Court could be established,
 could be transferred under Rule 11 bis, to this court. There was no case
 for transfer to Serbia and the only cases that could be transferred to Serbia
 were related to investigations the OTP had stopped in the course of the Completion
 Strategy which were with a certain amount of evidence, but which had to be completed
 by the local authorities and the Indictment should be issued in Belgrade by
 the local jurisdiction. Some of those had already been given, she said. It was
 ready to do this, there was already some good evidence and it was just a matter
 of completing the investigation. There have been no cases raised before the
 ICTY to be transferred to Serbia, she repeated.
 
 Landale added that the Completion Strategy and resolution 1503of 28 August envisaged the possibility of transferal of some mid and lower level
 cases to courts in the former Yugoslavia. That was a decision for the Judges
 to take according to the Rules of Procedure and Evidence and it was one that
 they would only take it they were satisfied at some stage in the future that
 a referral to a court would mean a fair and transparent trial with the necessary
 guarantees in place to protect witnesses and to ensure the rights of the accused.
 This was clearly stated in the various speeches to the Security Council on 10
 October of this year. There was no real ambiguity about it, he added.
 
 Ask what the relationship was like between Belgrade and theTribunal following what had occurred over the last 48 hours, Landale replied
 that on behalf of the Tribunal the situation was not satisfactory, so the Tribunal
 was in a state of expectation and hope that it would see improvement, specifically
 on the transfer of General Mladic if he was in Serbia and Montenegro, and further
 cooperation in all other areas. That applied, of course, not just for Serbia
 and Montenegro, but for the other states in the former Yugoslavia as well.
 
 Hartmann added that there were pending issues. The level ofcooperation was highlighted in the report of the Prosecutor to the Security
 Council. There were problems and the OTP expected Belgrade to improve on them.
 The only way to solve them was to act upon all the pending requests of the Tribunal.
 
 The OTP would see tomorrow, as it was expecting the transferof Kovacevic, one of the accused who was recently arrested, Hartmann added.
 
 Landale added that it was not just about what the expectationsof the Tribunal were, it was the expectations of the international community
 through the Security Council is stated in the latest Security Council resolution.
 It was laid out there in black and white, he concluded.
 
 ***** 
 |