| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 26 May 1999
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Today, Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following
 announcements:
 
 On 21 May 1999,Trial Chamber I (Judges Jorda (Presiding), Shahabudeen and Rodrigues), ordered:
 
 General EnverHadzihasanovic, Commander of the 3rd Corps of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina
 at the relevant time, to appear before the Trial Chamber on 23 June 1999;
 
 General MilivojePetkovic, Commander of the Main Staff of the Croatian Defence Council (HVO)
 at the relevant time, to appear before the Trial Chamber on 23 June 1999;
 
 Colonel Asim Koricic,Commander of the 7th Muslim Brigade of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina at
 the relevant time, to appear before the Trial Chamber on 15 June 1999;
 
 Colonel Amir Kubura,Commander of the 7th Muslim Brigade of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina at
 the relevant time, to appear before the Trial Chamber on 18 June 1999; and
 
 Colonel SerifPatkovic, Commander of the 7th Muslim Brigade of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina
 at the relevant time, to appear before the Trial Chamber on 22 June 1999.
 
 Each of the fiveseparate Orders details specific issues to be addressed in the respective witness'
 testimony and outlines the procedure for that deposition. None of the witnesses
 have requested protective measures.
 
 Eight Orders havenow been issued further to the Trial Chamber's Decision of 25 March 1999 (see
 ICTY Press Release No. 393 of 6 April 1999). General Philippe Morillon, Mr.
 Jean-Pierre Thebault and Colonel Robert Stewart have also been ordered to testify
 before the Trial Chamber (see Update Nos. 77 and 78).
 
   
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 Paul Risley, Spokesmanfor the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP), announced that he had spent Monday and
 Tuesday in Albania and that the Tribunals presence was continuing in Albania
 and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) with the support of the
 two Governments. The investigators continued to interview and collect information.
 Of particular interest was information from men crossing the border who had
 been in detention, he said.
 
   
 QUESTIONS:
   
   Asked aboutthe political pressures to indict Milosevic, Risley said that the Tribunal
 was an organ of the Security Council and its power was derived from the UN
 charter. No one had the power to influence or challenge the authority of the
 Tribunal other than through the Security Council, he said.
   Asked to commenton a quote attributed to him from Albania yesterday in which he said there
 was evidence of war crimes and human rights abuses, Risley replied that the
 investigations were at a very early stage but that the investigators were
 overwhelmed with information. There was evidence of war crimes on a massive
 scale and the challenge for the investigators was where to focus, he said.
   Asked whetherthere were concerns that evidence was being destroyed, Risley replied that
 there were very strong concerns and in the event of an international agreement
 the Tribunal must gain access immediately. The Tribunal had support from a
 number of countries who had agreed to give teams of investigators and forensic
 experts if an international force was allowed in, he said.
 Asked which
 countries had agreed to this, Risley said that he would not specify, but that
 the Tribunal had received an enthusiastic response.
   Asked whetherthe teams would work under the direction of the OTP, Risley replied that coordination
 would need working out.
   Asked whetherthe teams would collect information for their own purposes and then hand it
 over, Risley answered that this had yet to be worked out, but that he was
 confident that an arrangement acceptable to the Tribunal could be reached.
   Asked if assurancesbeen given that the Tribunal would gain access to Kosovo in the absence of
 a peace agreement, Risley replied that Justice Arbour had had high level discussions
 with NATO and other military leaders regarding access for Tribunal investigators,
 although it would be inappropriate for him to comment on the discussions directly,
 he said.
   Asked whetherOTP officials would make up a part of any national team, Risley replied that
 some form of liaison role would have to be worked out. In legal terms the
 Tribunal had primacy, he added.
   Asked aboutthe numbers currently on the Kosovo investigations and to what extent this
 was affecting other investigations, Risley replied that the investigations
 were putting a big strain on the investigators but that they felt they were
 meeting the challenge. Kosovo investigations were taking much time but more
 funding had been requested, he said.
   Asked if OTPwould direct operations carried out by national investigation teams, Risley
 replied that the crime scene would most likely be controlled by OTP and the
 teams controlled by their own national governments, although this was all
 speculative at the moment, he said.
   Asked for moreinformation on the orders issued in the Blaskic case, Landale replied that
 answers had not been received from General Milivoje Petkovic, Colonel Asim
 Koricic or Colonel Serif Patkovic. General Enver Hadzihasanovic and Colonel
 Amir Kubura had confirmed their attendance, he said.
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