| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 19.03.2003
 
 Time: 11:30
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 Jim Landale, Spokesmanfor Registry and Chambers, made the following opening statement:
 
 First to start with a reminder:
   
   On Tuesday 25 March at2.30 p.m. Trial Chamber III (Judge May presiding, Judge Robinson and Judge
 Kwon) will hold a hearing on the Motions for Provisional Release filed by
 Dragoljub Ojdanic and Nikola Sainovic on 10 February 2003, and by Milan Milutinovic
 on 23 January 2003.
 
 
 With regardto developments related to on-going proceedings:
 
 
   In the Prosecutor v.Slobodan Milosevic, on 13 March we received the Expert Report of Mr Andras
 Reidlmayer on the "Destruction of Cultural Heritage in Bosnia-Herzegovina
 1992-1996: A Post War Survey Of Selected Municipalities."
   On 14 March we receiveda "Motion for Provisional Release of Darko Mrdja".
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor v. Naletilic and Martinovic, on 18 March Trial Chamber
 I issued a scheduling Order vacating its Order of 27th February
 2003 setting Monday 24 March at 2 p.m. as the date and time for the rendering
 of the Judgement in this case.
 
 This follows the"Motion for Stay of Further Deliberation of the Evidence & Expedited
 Request for the Taking of Further Evidence in Light of Newly Disclosure Material
 Provided by OTP" submitted on 12th March 2003 by the Defence
 Counsel for Naletilic.
 
 The Trial Chamberfound "in the present circumstances, that it is appropriate to hold a hearing
 in order to ascertain the position of the Parties as to the possibly exculpatory
 nature of the Material, including for the Prosecution to clarify its reasons
 for submitting the Material if it did not think it was exculpatory, and for
 the Defence to establish prima facie that the Material falls under Rule
 68 of the Rules by showing just where and how it contains exculpatory information.
 
 The TrialChamber scheduled a hearing with the Prosecution and the Defence Counsel of
 the Accused Mladen Naletilic to take place this Thursday, 20th March
 2003, at 4.30 p.m. in Courtroom I in the presence of the Accused.
 
 
   On 13 March, a schedulingOrder was issued changing the time of Vojislav Seselj’s further initial appearance
 from 4.30 p.m on Tuesday 25 March, to 09.30 a.m. the same day.
 
  The trials continue asscheduled in the Galic, Simic et al, and Stakic cases. We will obviously let
 you know of any developments in the Milosevic case.
 
  This afternoon, therewill be a status conference in the Prosecutor v. Krstic in Courtroom I starting
 at 2.30 p.m.
 
  Tomorrow there will bea status conference in the Prosecutor v. Mrda at 3 p.m. in Courtroom I.
 
 Among thedecisions issued by the Chambers since the last briefing, the following are
 brought to your attention:
 
 
 
  On 13 March,in the case The Prosecutor v. Stanislav Galic, the Appeals Chamber
 (Judge Meron, presiding, Judge Pocar, Judge Shahabuddeen, Judge Hunt and Judge
 Guney) handed down its "Decision on Appeal From Refusal of Application
 For Disqualification and Withdrawal of Judge". The Disposition reads:
 "Accordingly, the Appeals Chamber deals with the application errroneously
 made to the section of Trial Chamber I hearing Prosecutor v. Galic as one
 made to the Presiding Judge of Trial Chamber I, and, in the place of the Presiding
 Judge, the Appeals Chamber refers that application to the Bureau to determine
 the original application made by Galic, namely, the ‘Defence Request for Withdrawal
 of Judge Alphonsus Orie, Presiding’, dated 23 January 2003". The detailed
 reasoning contained in the Decision will be available after this briefing.
   On 17 March,in the case The Prosecutor v. Strugar, Jokic and Kovacevic, Trial Chamber
 I (Judge Liu, presiding, Judge El Mahdi and Judge Orie) handed down its "Decision
 on the Prosecutor’s Amended Indictment and Application for Leave to Amend",
 which granted the Prosecution’s Application subject to the amendments indicated
 in the text of the Decision, and ordered the Prosecution to file the proposed
 Amended Indictment within 14 days of the Decision.
   On 18 March,in the case The Prosecutor v. Meakic, Gruban, Fustar, Banovic and Knezevic,
 Trial Chamber III (Judge May, presiding, Judge Robinson and Judge Kwon) issued
 its "Decision on Dusko Knezevic’s Motion for Provisional Release",
 dismissing the Motion.
 
 We will be handing out alist of all the latest court documents at the end of the briefing. Please let
 my office know which you would like copies of.
 
 
 
 FlorenceHartmann, Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor, made the following statement.
 
 
 
 The Prosecutorwill be in Belgrade this Friday where she will be attending a seminar organized
 by NATO and the Assembly of Serbia and Montenegro and dealing with the challenges
 the country is facing. The Seminar was organized before the assassination of
 the Prime Minister. She has been invited to participate at a session entitled
 " Serbia and Montenegro and the ICTY". This Session will also be held
 with the Interior Minister of Serbia, Mr. Dusan Mihajlovic.
 
 
 
 
 Questions 
 
 Asked whenwe could expect a medical report on Milosevic, Landale replied that he believed
 that the Judges expected it sometime today. He added that if and when he received
 a copy, which could be made public, he would make it public and if not he would
 keep the press updated about any results, which would stem from this report.
 He also said that as soon as he knew he would inform the press whether there
 would be continued Milosevic sessions this week.
 
 
 Asked foran explanation regarding the Motion filed by the Defence Counsel for Naletilic,
 Landale referred the journalist to the filing itself since that was very clear.
 He added that it essentially concerned information that the OTP had, that might
 or might not be considered exculpatory in this case.
 
 
 Florenceadded that the document had already been given to the Defence. The OTP did not
 believe that it was Rule 68 (exculpatory material). The document was not given
 to the Defence at the beginning of the Trial since it was not seen as an exculpatory
 document by the OTP. The Defence, in light of another document related to the
 same person, believed that it was. Asked if a new date for the judgement has
 been set, Landale replied in the negative since this would depend on the discussions
 to be held.
 
 
 Asked whetherthe assassination of Prime Minister Djindjic affected the work of the Tribunal,
 Landale replied that the Tribunal expected the Rule of Law would be upheld and
 that there would be cooperation. He continued to say that obviously the situation
 had changed and that Tribunal was watching it very closely to see how it would
 affect our work. He concluded by saying that the Tribunal hoped that cooperation
 would be continued and would be strengthened.
 
 
 Hartmannsaid the Prosecutor had already answered this question very precisely in the
 last days at a press conference in Geneva. She did not wish to repeat what she
 had already said, just one main line: the OTP’s demands would not change towards
 Serbia or any other state, they would not be less, and they would not be more.
 Cooperation was an obligation on a state and not on a person. Those who killed
 Prime Minister Djindjic were wrong in believing that this might diminish the
 determination to continue the reform of the country to move forward and to cooperate
 with the Tribunal. She added that for the moment, and it was a good sign, both
 the President of the Union and the new Prime Minister of Serbia were unequivocal
 in their support of the Tribunal.
 
 
 Asked tocomment on the Newspaper article Identitet linking people that
 had been arrested in relation to the assassination in Yugoslavia to the detainees
 in the UN Detention Unit in Scheveningen, Landale said that it would not be
 appropriate to comment on ongoing investigations in Serbia. Hartmann replied
 that she also did not wish to comment. She added that the list of public indicted
 persons could be found on our internet web site. Any further questions about
 this should be addressed to her of Jim Landale.
 
 
 Asked ifcommunication with the detainees and their lawyers was monitored, Landale replied
 that all communication with their Defence Counsel or legal representatives was
 privileged. All other non-privileged communication could be monitored by the
 management of the Detention Unit.
 
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