ICTY Press Briefing - 9 April 2002
Please
  note that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
  a summary 
ICTY
  Weekly Press Briefing 
  Date: 10.04.2002 
  Time: 11:00 a.m.
 
REGISTRY AND
  CHAMBERS
Jim Landale,
  Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
- Three new ad
  litem Judges will make their solemn declarations later this afternoon at 3 p.m.
  The swearing in ceremony will be officially witnessed by the Registrar, Hans
  Holthuis. The three Judges are Mohamed El Habib Fassi Fihri from Morocco, Volodymyr
  Vassylenko from the Ukraine, and Per-Johan Viktor Lindholm from Finland. 
- Judges Fassi
  Fihri and Vassylenko are due to join Trial Chamber II along with Judge Schomburg
  to preside over the trial of Milomir Stakic, which will begin next Tuesday 16
  April at 9 a.m. in Courtroom III.
- Judge Lindholm
  will replace Judge Singh on the Bosanski Samac trial, which will resume next
  Monday 15 April. 
- As you should
  have seen from our press release, Drago Josipovic was transferred to Spain yesterday
  evening to serve his sentence. 
- This afternoon
  at 4 p.m. there will be a hearing in the Banovic case before Trial Chamber III
  in Courtroom I. This follows the Prosecution's Motion to withdraw the Indictment
  against Nenad Banovic, dated 27 March 2002. 
In terms of
  court documents:
- On 3 April 2002,
  in the Naletilic and Martinovic or Tuta and Stela trial, the Trial Chamber rendered
  a "Decision on Motion of Accused Naletilic for a Trial Schedule which Incorporates
  Reasonable Breaks". The Motion was denied. 
- On 5 April in
  the same case, an "Order for Additional Information" was issued by
  the Trial Chamber ordering the Accused "to provide additional information
  to the Chamber on the files from the High Court of Mostar". 
- On 3 April,
  we received Dragan Jokic's "Application for Leave of Court to Appeal Denial
  of Provisional Release".
- On 3 April,
  the Prosecution filed a Motion to join the Momir Nikolic case to the Blagojevic,
  Obrenovic and Jokic case. 
- On 4 April,
  Judge Wolfgang Schomburg was appointed as the Pre-trial Judge in the Momir Nikolic
  case.
- On 5 April,
  the Prosecution's Final Pre-trial brief in the Stakic case was filed.
  In addition on the same day, we received an Order providing the trial schedule
  for the Stakic case.
- In the Krajisnik
  and Plavsic case, on 8 April, the Trial Chamber, Judge May presiding, rendered
  a "Decision on the Prosecution's Request and Second Request Pursuant to
  Rule 75 (D) for Variation of Protective Measures". 
- On 8 April we
  received the "Notice of Filing of Corrected Amended Indictment" in
  the Pasko Ljubicic case. 
Copies of all
  these documents will be available after this briefing. 
Florence Hartmann,
  Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor, made the following statement:
The
  Prosecutor will be back in The Hague on Friday following two weeks spent at
  the ICTR in Arusha.
 At the end of
  next week the Prosecutor will travel to the former Yugoslavia, where she will
  visit Belgrade, Sarajevo and Pristina.
Questions:
  Asked for the
    OTP's reaction to the fact that the law on cooperation to be adopted in Belgrade
    would exclude future indictees, Hartmann replied that the OTP's position on
    cooperation and the law was well known. The OTP would not comment on the law
    itself as this was an internal law and a problem of the country.
  As far as the
    OTP was concerned, however, no law was needed in order to implement the order
    of the court and to comply with the obligation towards the International Tribunal.
    The OTP expected Belgrade, as well as all other UN Member States, to comply
    with their obligations and to provide complete and regular cooperation with
    the Tribunal. The OTP expected Belgrade to remove all obstacles necessary
    to do this and not to create new ones.
  Landale added
    that on behalf of the Registry and Chambers, cooperation had to be complete
    and unconditional. First and foremost this meant the transfer of individuals
    indicted by this Tribunal who had been at large for unacceptably long periods
    of time.
  Hartmann added
    that compliance with the obligation meant compliance with the requests of
    the court - those which had been made in the past and those which will be
    made in the future.
  *****

