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 Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 5 May 1999
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Today, Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following
 announcements:
 
 Judge GabrielleKirk McDonald, the President of the International Tribunal, will testify in
 front of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe (CSCE) in Washington
 on Tuesday 11 May. She will talk primarily about the Tribunal in relation to
 events in Kosovo.
 
 The followingday President McDonald will be in New York to meet with the Council for Foreign
 Relations. Again discussions will revolve around the Kosovo crisis.
 
 We should be ina position to provide you with President McDonalds speech to the Council
 for Foreign Relations once it has been delivered. In addition, there is a revised
 biography of the President also available after this.
 
 In the Vujin contemptof court case, the Appeals Chamber issued on 4 May a scheduling order for further
 testimony by "witness D" to be heard on Monday 28 June 1999. All of
 the other witnesses, including those to be called by Mr Vujin, will be heard
 in the two-week period commencing Monday 30 August and ending Friday 10 September
 1999.
 
 Concerning theKordic and Cerkez case: On 3 May, Trial Chamber III issued an order scheduling
 a hearing on motions that had been filed pursuant to Rule 95 of the Tribunals
 Rules of Procedure and Evidence. Rule 95 stipulates that, "No evidence
 shall be admissible if obtained by methods which cast substantial doubt on its
 reliability or if its admission is antithetical to, and would seriously damage,
 the integrity of the proceedings." The original motion filed on 22
 January by Kordics defence had sought to "suppress and exclude
 from admission as evidence all material obtained in a search conducted on 23
 September 1998". The hearing has been set for 31 May.
 
 In the Kvockaand Others case: On 29 April, following the "Prosecutors Notice
 of failure to obtain documents", and pursuant to Article 29 of the
 Statute, Trial Chamber III requested the Republika Srpska to "provide
 such assistance as it is able to the Prosecution to obtain the documents
".
 In addition, the Trial Chamber ordered the Prosecution to report whether
 or not the documents had been produced at a status conference scheduled for
 3 June 1999.
 
 Landale indicatedthat copies of the relevant documents would be available after the briefing.
 
   
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 Mr Graham Blewitt, Deputy Prosecutor, said he had a few brief matters to raise:
 
 He first announcedthat the Prosecutors new Spokesman, Paul Risley, had travelled to the
 Balkans today. Blewitt explained that he would be visiting Tirana and Skopje
 in order to assist the press in the area.
 
 He then went onto say that Justice Arbour had travelled to Paris today in order to meet with
 government ministers to raise a number of matters, including the initiative
 that all outstanding arrest warrants be executed. He said that the Prosecutor
 believed strongly that this would send a positive deterrent signal to Kosovo.
 Furthermore, the Prosecutor hoped that arrests on sealed indictments would take
 place as this would also send a particularly strong signal to Kosovo. Justice
 Arbour would also be talking in Paris about increased access to information
 held by the government that could be relevant to her investigators.
 
 Lastly, Blewittannounced that on Friday, Justice Arbour and himself would be traveling to Sarajevo.
 Blewitt said he could not give any more information since it involved operational
 matters. He went on to say that on Sunday they would be leaving Sarajevo for
 the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) where they would pursue the
 Kosovo investigations. Finally Blewitt said that he and the Prosecutor would
 be back in The Hague on Wednesday 12 May 1999.
 
   
 QUESTIONS:
   
   Asked if hecould comment on the rumours that Justice Arbour would be leaving the Tribunal,
 Blewitt replied that he assumed that these rumours were based on Ray Bonners
 article in the New York Times. He said that it was the Office of the Prosecutors
 (OTP) view that the article was without foundation and that the topic was
 not discussed during lunch with the American officials. He added that the
 Prosecutor had not even discussed this with her own government, let alone
 with other governments.
   Asked if Arbourwould raise with the French government the Order issued for certain witnesses
 to appear to give testimony (in the Blaskic trial) and, given that there had
 been obtacles in the past, had these problems been solved, Blewitt replied
 that he was not certain if this would be on the Prosecutors agenda and
 that she would mostly push the two initiatives he had mentioned before, as
 well as other matters. He added that discussions were always ongoing and that
 he had no reason to believe that the witnesses would not give evidence as
 required.
   Asked whatkind of evidence had been received since the announcement some weeks ago that
 the OTP was not receiving the information it was hoping for, Blewitt replied
 that since then the OTP had received a lot more, but that they would continue
 to urge for further information.
   Asked if itwas hard to get this kind of information, Blewitt replied that it was traditional
 that this sort of information was not released by governments because they
 gathered it for their own tactical and strategic reasons. He added that it
 was not easy to hand over this type of information to a prosecutor of an international
 tribunal. He said that there was a conflict between the OTPs desire
 for information and the countries own purposes, but that governments
 were trying to work with the OTP to come to a compromise. He said that the
 OTP would never have everything, but if the information was sufficient they
 would be satisfied.
   Asked for theProsecutors programme in FYROM, Blewitt said that the final programme
 was not ready yet, but that the OTP had opened an office in FYROM and that
 it was the first time that there were investigations there. He added that
 it was standard practice to meet with the relevant government officials.
   Asked whatthe response had been to the request to execute all the outstanding arrest
 warrants, Blewitt replied that there had been general agreement with the proposition
 and the fact that it would have a deterrent effect.
   Blewitt wasasked if the OTP distinguished between petitions presented to it since the
 people who had handed over the Serb petition last Monday were not allowed
 into the hallway as opposed to the Radical Party petition. He replied that
 there was no difference in approach. He explained that when the Radical Party
 handed over its petition the NATO airstrikes had not yet begun and they did
 not foresee any difficulties in receiving it. Since then it had become apparent
 that this could be turning into a regular event and the OTP did not want to
 be seen accepting petitions all the time. Blewitt said that it would be future
 policy not to accept any more petitions and that OTP realized that accepting
 the Radical Party petition may have been a mistake.
   Asked if hewanted to comment on the petition, Blewitt replied that it merely represented
 a wish list of individuals. He added that it did not serve as anything new
 to the OTP and that it served no evidentiary purpose.
   Asked if theOTP was investigating NATOs actions, Blewitt replied that the OTP was
 satisfied that it had jurisdiction over the 19 NATO members, but that the
 OTP never commented on investigations. He said that the only exception had
 been made last year when they announced investigations into the Kosovo situation.
 Blewitt also said that he would not comment on the allegations that NATO was
 committing war crimes but would say that Justice Arbour had reminded NATO-member
 states of their obligations to comply with the Geneva Conventions and that
 she had received reassurances that they were, which she had accepted in the
 absence of evidence to the contrary.
   Asked if Blewittwas aware of rumours that high ranking NATO officials refused to arrest indictees
 while the NATO bombings were on going in order not to cause any unrest in
 the Republika Srpska, Blewitt replied that he had not received any information
 that this was NATOs policy.
 
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