| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 24.07.2002
 
 Time: 12.00
 
 
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim
 Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 Good morning, 
 The Presidentof the Tribunal, Judge Claude Jorda, the Prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, and the
 Registrar, Hans Holthuis, have been in New York for the last couple of days.
 Yesterday they were invited to appear before the Security Council to discuss
 the report on the Judicial Status of the Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
 and the Prospects for Referring Certain Cases to National Courts.
 
 With regardto court documents:
 
   On 22 July,Trial Chamber II, Judge Wolfgang Schomburg presiding, rendered two decisions
 rejecting the applications for provisional release filed by Dragan Obrenovic
 and Vidoje Blagojevic on 11 June and 17 July respectively.
 These are relativelydetailed decisions and contain some legal elements that will certainly be of
 interest to you. Copies can be picked up at the end of the briefing.
 
   By way of reminder,we currently have 10 accused on provisional release and there are seven requests
 pending.
   In the Prosecutorv. Milan Simic, we received on 22 July a "Motion for Provisional Release
 of Milan Simic". This makes reference to the plea agreement between the
 Office of the Proscutor and Simic, by which Simic entered a guilty plea to
 two counts of torture and all other charges against him were dismissed. The
 agreement was covered by a confidentiality order until Monday, when the order
 was lifted.
   In the Prosecutorv. Slobodan Milosevic, I can confirm that the status conference for the preparation
 of the Bosnia and Croatia parts of the trial will take place tomorrow morning,
 beginning at 9 a.m.
   On 12 Julywe received the "Prosecution's Response to Observations of the Amici
 Curiae on Expert Reports of Philip Coo".
   On 17 July,we received the "Observations by the Amici Curiae on the Prosecution's
 Request to Adduce the Evidence of Mr. George Georgiou, Mr. Andreas Iacovou
 and Mr. Yiannakis Tsiartis Pursuant to Rule 92 bis Without Cross-Examination
 by the Accused".
 And, on 19 Julywe received three documents relating to Zoran Lilic's scheduled testimony, which
 he requested to have filed publicly. These documents are entitled:
 
 - "Authorisation"
 
 - "Objection to the Trial Chamber, Witness Mr. Zoran Lilic", and
 
 - "A letter from Mr. Zoran Djindjic to Mr. Zoran Lilic".
 
 Again, those documentswill be available after this briefing.
 
   In the Prosecutorv. Momcilo Krajisnik and Biljana Plavsic, on 17 July Trial Chamber III, Judge
 Richard May presiding, issued an "Order for Submission of Guarantees",
 ordering the defence for Krajisnik to obtain and file guarantees from the
 Government of the Republic of Serbia and the Government of the Federal Republic
 of Yugoslavia in one of the working languages of the Tribunal no later than
 Wednesday 31 July 2002. This follows Krajisnik's "Renewed Motion for
 Provisional Release", which was filed on 5 June 2002.
   In additionin this case, we received on 19 July a Prosecution expert report prepared
 by Dr. Colin Kaiser pursuant to Rule 94 bis entitled "Report on the Damaging
 and Destruction of Islamic and Roman Catholic Sacral Buildings in the Municipalities
 of Bosanski Novi, Donji Vakuf, Kljuc, Kotor Varos, Prijedor and Sanski Most
 in 1992 (April to December) and Preliminary Remarks on Damaging and Destruction
 of Islamic and Roman Catholic Sacral Buildings in the Municipalities of Bijeljina,
 Brcko, Bratunac, Cajnice, Doboj, Foca, Ilijas, Rogatica, Visegrad and Zvornik".
 Copies available on request.
   In the Prosecutorv. Milan Martic and with regard to his request for provisional release, on
 23 July we received a "Guarantee of the Federal Government of the Federal
 Republic of Yugoslavia and the Government of the Republic of Serbia"
 and the "Prosecution's Addendum to Response to Motion for Provisional
 Release".
   In the Prosecutorv. Miroslav Kvocka, Milojica Kos, Mladjo Radic, Zoran Zigic and Dragoljub
 Prcac, we received on 23 July a "Motion for Separation of Appelant Zigic's
 Appeal Procedure".
   And, on thesame day, a letter from Zigic revoking his power of attorney for his defence
 counsel Miodrag Deretic.
 With regardto the courtroom schedule:
 
 As you know, thelast day of the Milosevic trial before the summer recess will be this Friday.
 The trial will resume on Monday 26 August. The Stakic trial will continue next
 week until Thursday 1 August. The Martinovic and Naletilic, Galic and Simic
 trials will run throughout next week.
 
 In addition, therewill be status conference in the Halilovic case on Monday 29 July at 4 p.m.
 in Courtroom I. The presence of the accused is not required. And, there will
 be a status conference in the Krnojelac case on Wednesday 31 July at 4.30 p.m.
 in Courtroom I before Judge Meron. The accused is required to be present.
 
 On behalf of theOutreach Programme, I can tell you that 12 defence attorneys from Kosovo began
 a five-day working visit to the International Tribunal on Monday. The working
 visit is funded by the American Bar Association - Central and East European
 Law Initiative (ABA CEELI) and co-organised by the ICTY Outreach Programme.
 The 12 attorneys will have an opportunity to observe court proceedings before
 the Tribunal, as well as to hear presentations by Tribunal officials on the
 applicable law and procedure at the ICTY. This is the second visit of legal
 professionals from Kosovo to The Hague Tribunal supported by the Outreach Programme.
 The first visit was organised last October in cooperation with the Council for
 Defence of Human Rights and Freedoms
 
 (CDHRF).
 
 Finally, justto let you know that next week's briefing on 31 July will be the last before
 the summer recess. Press briefings will resume on Wednesday 28 August.
 
 
 Graham Blewitt, Deputy Prosecutor, made the following statement:
 
 This morning theOffice of the Prosecutor sought the assistance of the Government of the Federation
 of Bosnia and Herzegovina, in particular the assistance of the Ministry of Defence,
 to carry out a search of the 2nd corps archives at the 2nd corps headquarters
 and barracks in Tuzla. Full consent was given for this search to be carried
 out and the cooperation has been given by the 2nd corps commander and his staff.
 The Prosecutor is very grateful for the full cooperation that has been given
 by the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and in particular the second core
 commander and his staff. In addition, the Prosecutor is also grateful to the
 assistance given to the OTP staff by SFOR in this particular endeavor.
 
 Questions: 
    Asked if Lilicwas risking contempt in the Milosevic trial if he did not testify, as was
 the case with witness K12, Blewiitt replied that he would not comment on proceedings
 before the ICTY for reasons of sub judice. As Lilic had received assurances
 from the government Blewitt said he remained confident that a solution would
 be found to the situation and also confident that Mr. Lilic would give the
 evidence.
 
 
 
    Asked if thepremises had already been searched and cleaned of documents and if this was
 the case what else new did they expect to find, Blewitt replied that this
 was the first occasion that the 2nd corps headquarters had been searched and
 he anticipated that documents relevant to inquires and investigations would
 be found. There had been no suggestion that documents had been destroyed,
 after the search was completed the relevant documents seized would be bought
 back to The Hague and assessed, he added.
 
 
 
    Asked aboutthe report in the Financial Times as to the possible appointment of Carla
 Del Ponte as the Chief Prosecutor of the ICC and how that would affect her
 position at the ICTY, Blewitt replied that he had not seen the report, however
 if this happened then clearly she could not be the Prosecutor of the ICTY
 and the ICTR. If she was appointed to the ICC then that would mean that the
 two Tribunals would require the appointment of a new Prosecutor, which would
 be a matter for the Security Council. The appointment of a Prosecutor to the
 ICC would be a matter for the States Parties that were signatories to the
 ICC treaty, that had ratified the treaty, he added.
 
 
 
    Asked whatother headquarters where searched for documents, Blewitt replied that there
 had been several searches conducted at military headquarters. Asked what they
 were looking for, Blewitt replied they were looking for documents that would
 help with ongoing investigations.
 
 
 
    Asked if theProsecution was going to ask for the possibility of the third extra week in
 the Kosovo section of the Milosevic trial and if so would this provide the
 Prosecution with enough time to present all the evidence in their case, Blewitt
 replied that the Prosecution shared the Trial Chamber's desire to finish all
 trials in an efficient and timely manner. The time constraints placed on the
 Prosecution did cause problems but the Prosecution was doing everything they
 could to ensure that the OTP could comply with the deadlines in a way that
 was compatible with the Prosecutor's obligation to establish the case. The
 OTP would certainly take advantage of any additional time granted to the Prosecution
 by the Trial Chamber but overall the OTP was satisfied that they could complete
 the Kosovo aspect of the Trial within the time limits set. It might well be
 that the OTP would take advantage of the third week but that would be a matter
 for Mr. Nice and the trial team, he added.
 
 
 
   Asked aboutthe report that Richard Prosper would be coming to The Hague for meetings
 with ICTY officials, both Landale and Blewitt replied that they had no knowledge
 of the visit.
 
 
 
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