| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 14.05.2003
 
 Time: 14:30
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 Jim Landale,Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following opening statement:
 
 	First, I would liketo add to the tributes that have already been paid to Elizabeth Neuffer, who
 was killed in a car crash in Iraq on Friday. Through her writing and reporting
 she did an enormous amount to highlight the issue of war crimes and the work
 of both the ICTY and ICTR. She was a friend to many of us here in The Hague.
 On behalf of the Tribunal, I would like to send our condolences to her partner,
 family, friends and colleagues. She will be greatly missed.
 
 The Registrar of the Tribunal,Hans Holthuis, is in Kosovo this week. The three main purposes of the visit
 are:
 
 (1)	to visit the ICTYField Office in Kosovo, to meet with staff and discuss issues related to its
 operation.
 
 (2)	to conduct inter-agencymeetings with UNMIK and other international officials on a broad range of operational
 and administrative matters.
 
 (3) 	to obtain at first-handa clear overview of the international community’s handling of war crimes cases
 with relevance to the Tribunal's own completion strategy that envisages the
 possible deferment of ICTY cases to the State Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
 
 
 As you all will have seen,the Blagojevic et al trial started this morning. In addition the appeals hearing
 in the Prosecutor v. Milorad Krnojelac also began this morning. It is
 due to finish tomorrow at 5.30 p.m.
 
 
 Among the court documentswe have received since the last briefing, the following are brought to your
 attention:
 
 
 
 On 9 May, in The Prosecutorv. Vojislav Seselj, Trial Chamber II (Judge Schomburg, presiding, Judge
 Mumba and Judge Agius) issued its "Decision on Prosecution’s Motion for
 Order Appointing Counsel to Assist Vojislav Seselj with his Defence". In
 the Decision, the Trial Chamber inter alia:
 
 decided "that standbycounsel…shall be assigned to the Accused";
 
 stated that "standbycounsel must be fluent both in B/C/S and in one of the official languages of
 the Tribunal";
 
 ordered "the Registryto assign one standby counsel from the list of counsel kept by the Registrar";
 and
 
 rejected "the Prosecution’sMotion in so far as the Motion seeks an order from the Trial Chamber ‘directing
 the Registrar to appoint legal counsel to assist the accused Seselj with the
 preparation and conduct of his defence’ without any limitation".
 
 
 The Trial Chamber definedthe role of the standby counsel as follows:
 
 
  To assist the Accusedin the preparation of his case during the pre-trial phase whenever so requested
 by the Accused;
 
  To assist the Accusedin the preparation and presentation of his case at trial whenever so requested
 by the Accused;
 
  To receive copies ofall court documents, filings and disclosed materials that are received by
 or sent to the Accused;
 
  To be present in thecourtroom during the proceedings;
 
  To be engaged activelyin the substantive preparation of the case and to participate in the proceedings,
 in order always to be prepared to take over from the Accused at trial;
 
  To address the Courtwhenever so requested by the Accused or the Chamber;
 
  To offer advice or makesuggestions to the Accused as counsel sees fit, in particular on evidential
 and procedural issues;
 
  As a protective measurein the event of abusive conduct by the Accused, to put questions to witnesses,
 in particular sensitive or protected witnesses, on behalf of the Accused if
 so ordered by the Trial Chamber, without depriving the Accused of his right
 to control the content of the examination;
 
  In exceptional circumstancesto take over the defence from the Accused at trial should the Trial Chamber
 find, following a warning, that the Accused is engaging in disruptive conduct
 or conduct requiring his removal from the courtroom under Rule 80(B).
 
 On 9 May, Trial Chamber,I Section A (Judge Liu, presiding, Judge Vassylenko and Judge Argibay) issued
 a "Separation of Proceedings and Scheduling Order" in The Prosecutor
 v. Vidoje Blagojevic, Dragan Obrenovic, Dragan Jokic and Momir Nikolic.
 The Trial Chamber ordered as follows:
 
 "1. The Proceedingsagainst Momir Nikolic are hereby separated from those against the three co-accused
 charged under the same Indictment;
 
 
 2. the Prosecution and counselfor Momir Nikolic shall, by Monday 14 July 2003, file all submissions and provide
 statements of any witnesses they might call in relation to the sentencing hearing;
 and
 
 
 3. the date for the sentencinghearing shall be fixed by further Order".
 
 
 On 9 May in the same case,we received the Trial Chamber’s "Order on the Appointment of Independent
 Legal Counsel", in which the Trial Chamber requested that "the
 Registrar appoint independent counsel to advise the Accused, Mr. Vidoje Blagojevic,
 on his rights in relation to the assignment of counsel, and assist him in preparing
 documentation, if any, that may follow from their consultations on this issue".
 
 
 On 12 May in the same case,we received the Trial Chamber’s "Decision on Motion to Dismiss Charges
 Against Accused Momir Nikolic", in which the Trial Chamber granted
 the Motion.
 
 
 On 8 May, in the TheProsecutor v. Radoslav Brdjanin, the Trial Chamber II (Judge Agius, presiding,
 Judge Janu and Judge Taya) issued its "Order Instigating Proceedings Against
 Milka Maglov", in which it directed the Registrar to appoint an amicus
 curiae and ordered the amicus curiae to "prosecute Milka
 Maglov for:
 
 
1. the allegedintimidation of the Witness, and 2.
 the alleged disclosure of the identity of the Witness to a member of the public,
 in violation of an order of the Chamber".
 
 On 6 May, in The Prosecutorv. Slobodan Milosevic Trial Chamber III (Judge May, presiding, Judge Robinson
 and Judge Kwon) issued its "Decision on Two Prosecution Requests For
 Certification of Appeal Against Decisions of the Trial Chamber" in
 which it granted both Requests relating to the Trial Chamber’s "Decision
 on Prosecution Motion for Judicial Notice of Adjudicated Facts", filed
 on 10 April, and the Trial Chamber’s "Decision on Prosecution Motion
 for the Admission of Evidence-in-Chief of its Witnesses in Writing",
 issued on 16 April 2003.
 
 Again in the Milosevic caseand on the same day, the "Submission of Serbia and Montenegro Pursuant
 to the Chamber Order Issued at the Oral Hearing of 10 March 2003 Concerning
 the ‘Prosecution’s Application For an Order Pursuant to Rule 54 bis Directing
 the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia to Comply with Outstanding Requests for Assistance’"
 was filed.
 
 On 7 May in the Miloseviccase, we received the "Prosecution Reply to Amici Curiae Observations
 on Prosecution Motion Under Rule 73 bis".
 
 In the same case on 13 Maywe received the "Interlocutory Appeal of the Prosecution Against the
 Decision on Prosecution Motion for the Admission of Evidence-in-Chief of its
 Witnesses in Writing".
 
 On 13 May, in The Prosecutorv. Milutinovic, Sainovic and Ojdanic Trial Chamber III (Judge May, presiding,
 Judge Robinson and Judge Kwon) received "General Ojdanic’s Appeal from
 Decision on Motion Challenging Jurisdiction and Motion for Extension of Time
 to File Opening Brief".
 
 On 12 May in the Prosecutorv. Enver Hadzihasanovic and Amir Kubura, we received the "Prosecution
 Response and Reply to ‘Defence Response to Amend the Amended Indictment and
 Requested Stay of Proceedings’ and Reply to ‘Response to Amir Kubura to Prosecution
 Motion for Leave to Amend the Amended Indictment".
 
 Copies of all the documentsI have mentioned are available to you on request.
 
 
 Questions: 
 
 Asked to clarifyhow Kajisnik’s defence was funded and whether he paid partially for his own
 defence or it was paid for 100 percent by the Tribunal, Landale replied that
 broadly speaking his defence was paid for by the Tribunal. There was a complex
 system in place for evaluating how payments were made to defence counsel.
 
 He went on to say that,unlike the old system, for the trial stage defence teams would be able to receive
 a monthly stipend rather than a set number of hours per month for which they
 could bill. Trials were divided into three categories depending on their length,
 their complexity, the issues to be explored in the trial, the level of the accused
 and the number of municipalities being looked at in the trial. All of these
 things would be taken into consideration before deciding on what the monthly
 amount would be that the defence team could expect to receive from the Tribunal’s
 legal aid.
 
 Asked whether or not Krajisnik’sdefence was paid for by the Tribunal, Landale replied that he believed that
 Krajisnik’s defence was paid for entirely out of the Tribunal’s legal aid system.
 He added that he would check this information.
 
 Asked whether there wereany accused whose defence was not paid for by the Tribunal, Landale replied
 that there were a couple of accused whose defence was not paid for by the Tribunal.
 He added that he would check the information in case the situation had changed,
 but he believed they were Dario Kordic, General Blaskic and possibly one other.
 
 Asked whether the Tribunalhad set a limit as to how much a defence team could spend, Landale replied that
 it had.
 
 Asked how much the limitwas, Landale replied that it depended on the case and on the projection of how
 long the case might take. He added that the projection was worked out between
 the Trial Chamber and the Registrar, the Trial Chamber having received the lists
 of witnesses that the trial teams intended to call, the areas on which the trial
 would focus and certain other factors.
 
 Asked how much the decisionto appoint standby counsel in the Seselj case would change the trial in comparison
 to the Milosevic trial and whether it limited the right of the accused to cross
 examine, Landale replied that it did not. Seselj had the right to represent
 himself but the standby counsel was there to advise him. Also, in a possible
 case where he was conducting his defence in an inappropriate manner, if the
 Trial Chamber believed for example he was harassing witnesses or not behaving
 in a way suitable to court etiquette, the standby counsel would be in a position
 to take over, either cross examination or other elements of the defence. The
 document, which would be available after the briefing, stated very clearly what
 the expectations were, he concluded.
 
 Asked whether he had theright to choose from the Registry list of Defense counsel or would the standby
 counsel be appointed, Landale replied that from his reading of the document
 he believed that the standby counsel would be appointed.
 
 Asked whether there wasany news on when Stanisic and Simatovic would arrive in The Hague, Landale replied
 that there was nothing concrete yet. He added that he had read the comments
 in the media suggesting that it would be in 10 days to two weeks once the authorities
 had worked on the necessary procedures according to their law on cooperation
 with the Tribunal. He concluded that, as far as the Tribunal was concerned,
 the sooner their transfer took place the better. The Tribunal was confident
 that it would happen in due course, he added.
 
 Asked whether reports thatStanisic was seriously ill could be an obstacle to his transfer to The Hague,
 Landale replied that he had seen the media reports on this issue, but he did
 not believe that the Registrar or the Tribunal had received anything official
 along those lines. The Tribunal would have to see something along those lines
 before any comment could be made.
 
 Asked whether there wouldbe an investigation by the Tribunal into whether Deyan Brashich had over billed
 the Tribunal, Landale replied that if there was any suggestion that this had
 happened there would be an investigation, but he had not seen anything suggesting
 this. He added that he would check to see whether this was something that the
 Tribunal was looking into or investigating.
 
 A journalist suggested thatthis was exactly what Judge Orie had suggesting in court yesterday when he mentioned
 the number of hours worked by the defence on the case. Landale replied that
 he did not believe that Judge Orie was suggesting that there had been any tampering
 with the figures, he was just stating what he believed the actual figures were
 with regards to the number of hours that had been billed and the cost so far
 of the Defence. He added that he did not believe that it was anything beyond
 that.
 
 Asked, as Deyan Brashichhad a history of over charging, whether the Judges would look into it, Landale
 replied that the Tribunal had very tight auditing controls on the way defence
 counsel were paid. Those controls, he believed, would be even tighter now that
 the new system was being brought into place for the trial period.
 
 A journalist commented onthe fact that there had been no courtroom feed in their press room off the lobby
 for the last three days. She added that the audio visual department technicians
 had informed her that they were working on the problem, but that it would take
 some time. Asked whether the Press Office could add some additional pressure
 to ensure that the public could follow the court proceedings, Landale replied
 that he would look into it.
 
 A journalist mentioned thefact that there were a number of journalists from the former Yugoslavia who
 were unable to be at the Tribunal due to the fact that they had been blocked
 in Belgrade since February waiting for their Dutch residency papers. He added
 that this was not the first time that there had been problems faced by Serbian
 and Bosnian journalists in getting visas and residency documents and that it
 was his understanding that the Registrar was due to go to the Dutch Foreign
 Ministry to discuss this problem. Asked whether anything constructive had come
 out of that meeting, Landale replied that the Tribunal was concerned about this
 situation. It had been raised with the Dutch Foreign Ministry. He could not
 comment any more than that at this stage, it was something the Tribunal would
 continue to raise if the problem persisted. The Tribunal hoped that there would
 be a resolution, he added.
 
 A journalist stated thatthree months ago when Murtezi was released his defence had asked the Judge to
 release him without prejudice of the Prosecution, but no decision was made at
 that time. Asked whether any decision had been made, Landale replied that he
 had not seen any decision, but he would check.
 
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