| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 29.05.2002
 
 Time: 12:00 p.m.
 
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim
 Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 
 
 With regard to court documents:
 
 - We have furthercopies of the Appeals Chamber "Decision on Application by Dragan Jokic
 for Provisional Release" for those of you who do not already have one.
 You should have seen our press release on Jokic's provisional release yesterday.
 
 - In the Miloseviccase on 24 May, we received a scheduling order that set out the following:
 
 (1) no laterthan Wednesday, 29 May 2002, the Prosecution shall file
 
 (i) a detailedlist setting out dates of disclosure in a language the accused understands
 of the statements of witnesses listed in Attachment A and, where appropriate,
 details of the disclosure to the amici curiae and to the accused of the
 unredacted statements or details of protected witnesses; and
 
 (ii) applications for protective measures for witnesses K33, K34, K35 and
 K37; and
 
 (2) at the sametime the Prosecution shall provide to the Trial Chamber:
 
 (i) a summaryof the evidence of those witnesses unless such summary is already included
 in the documents before the Trial chamber, in which case the Prosecution
 shall clearly indicate where such information is to be found;
 
 (ii) the statements of all witnesses whose evidence is sought to be admitted
 by way of a written statement pursuant to Rule 92 bis, irrespective of whether
 the attestation procedure has been completed or not;
 
 (iii) the identity and statements of all expert witnesses to be called to
 the case.
 
 - On 22 May, wereceived a scheduling order in the Celebici case, setting a time for the oral
 arguments due to take place on Tuesday 18 June commencing at 9.00 a.m. Each
 Appellant will have up to 30 minutes to make his oral submission; the Prosecution
 will have up to 60 minutes in response to all of the Appellant's submissions;
 and then the Appellant will have up to 10 minutes to reply to the Prosecution's
 response.
 
 - On 24 May inthe Krajisnik and Plavsic case, we received the "First Decision on Prosecution's
 Motion for Protective Measures for Sensitive Source Witnesses", which deals
 with protective measures.
 
 - On 27 May, wereceived the amended joinder indictment in the case of the Prosecutor v. Vidoje
 Blagojevic, Dragan Obrenovic, Dragan Jokic and Momir Nikolic. Copies in both
 English and French will be available on request.
 
 Copies of allthe documents will be available after this briefing.
 
 In terms ofthe court schedule:
 
 - In the Milosevictrial, proceedings this Friday will run from 9.00 a.m. until 11.45 a.m., due
 to a motion hearing in the Krajisnik and Plavsic case that will take place in
 Courtroom I at 12.15 p.m., which will then be followed by a status conference.
 
 - There will bea Status Conference in the Blaskic case at 4.00 p.m. on Monday 3 June before
 Judge Pocar in Courtroom II.
 
 - On 27 May, wereceived a scheduling order in the Kordic and Cerkez case, setting the next
 status conference for Friday 14 June at 3.00 p.m.
 
 Jean-JacquesJoris, Special Adviser to the Prosecutor, made no statement:
 
   
 Questions: 
    Asked whetherthe Tribunal would consider other applications for provisional release, Landale
 replied that the procedure for provisional release was clear. It would only
 come about if the accused had first submitted a motion for provisional release
 to the Trial Chamber setting out arguments for their provisional release.
 The Judges of the Trial Chamber would then consider that motion along with
 any submission from other interested parties including the Prosecution, any
 possible guarantees that might be offered by the state to which the accused
 was proposing to return, the host nation and from others as well. The Judges
 would then look at all these submissions and decide whether or not to grant
 the provisional release under certain conditions, Landale concluded.
 Asked about
 the wording in the Milosevic disclosure order and if "in a language the
 accused understands" means BCS or English, Landale replied that, where
 they can, the Tribunal was trying to ensure that the accused received documents
 and was able to follow all proceedings in BCS. To ensure that there was no
 doubt whatsoever that he could follow everything that was going on in the
 trial, a small speaker was located in front of Mr. Milosevic that gave him
 simultaneous interpretation in BCS throughout the entire trial, Landale added.
    Asked if theprevious court order that the accused was entitled to receive all courts document
 in BCS relates to this new order, Landale replied that his reading of the
 new order was that it was reliant on the previous ruling by the Judges, which
 was that all document had to be supplied to the accused in BCS.
 
 
 *****
 
 
 |