| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 17 November 1999
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following announcements:
 
 As you shouldall know by now, yesterday during the 21st meeting of the Plenary,
 Judge Claude Jorda was chosen to be the new President of the Tribunal, succeeding
 Judge Gabrielle Kirk McDonald. Judge Florence Mumba was chosen as Vice President.
 
 Today, at 09.30a.m., Judge Patricia Wald was sworn in as a Judge of the Tribunal to serve the
 remainder of Judge McDonalds term.
 
 The Plenary continuestoday under the chairmanship of President Jorda and with Judge Wald instead
 of Judge McDonald. On the agenda are the composition of the Trial Chambers and
 the assignment of cases. The Plenary is due to finish this afternoon and we
 do plan to send out a press release on all of the developments once we have
 them.
 
 At an open statusconference on 15 November it was announced that the Kunarac and Kovac trial
 is scheduled to commence on 1 February 2000 at 10.00 a.m. (The 1 February is
 a Tuesday.)
 
 Also, in the samecase, on 12 November, the Prosecution submitted an expert witness statement
 under Rule 94 bis. This concerns the testimony of Dr. Craig Rath, who the Prosecution
 intends to call as an expert witness.
 
 Also, a schedulingorder in the contempt allegations in the Simic and Others case has
 been issued, scheduling further hearings in the afternoons of the week commencing
 Monday 29 November 1999, starting at 2.30pm on Monday and Tuesday, to be continued
 on Wednesday and Thursday if needed.
 
 Finally, on 12November, Stevan Todorovic filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus against
 the Commanding Officer of the Detention Unit. This is the first time that such
 a petition has been filed at the Tribunal. I will leave you to read the entire
 document in your own time, however the issues raised again centre around Todorovics
 assertion that he was "kidnapped" in the FRY by "unknown assailants"
 and transported to Bosnia where he was handed over to SFOR.
 
 The definitionof habeas corpus given by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and
 as quoted in the Barayagwiza Appeals Judgement is:
 
 "A judicialremedy designed to protect personal freedom or physical integrity against arbitrary
 decisions by means of a judicial decree ordering the appropriate authorities
 to bring the detained person before a judge so that the lawfulness of the detention
 may be determined and, if appropriate, the release of the detainee be ordered."
 
   
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 Paul Risley, Spokesman for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) made the following
 announcements:
 
 The Prosecutorwill travel to Rwanda and to the site of the Rwanda Tribunal in Arusha, Tanzania
 this weekend. She will return to The Hague in approximately two weeks. This
 will be her first visit to Rwanda and to the Tribunal in Arusha.
 
  The Prosecutorwelcomes the appointment of Judge Claude Jorda as the new President of the Tribunal
 and of Judge Florence Mumba as Vice President.
 
 The Deputy Prosecutor,Graham Blewitt, will be available at 2p.m. this afternoon to provide an update
 on the OTP, the Prosecutors activities and recent trips to New York and
 to the region of the former Yugoslavia.
 
   
 QUESTIONS: 
   Asked whetherthere were any developments regarding relations between the OTP and Rwandan
 Government and whether the Prosecutor would receive an official welcome from
 the Government during her visit to Rwanda, Risley replied that it was the
 intention of the Prosecutor to travel to Rwanda as part of her trip. He added
 that the OTP office was situated in Kigali and whether or not she would receive
 an official welcome from the Rwandan government was of less importance than
 making the trip and meeting the individuals within her office. He concluded
 that the OTP was working to resolve the apparent conflict and he was very
 confident that there would be a resolution to that matter.
   Asked for thenames of all the indictees on the Kunarac indictment, Landale replied that
 in addition to Dragoljub Kunarac, Radomir Kovac was also on the indictment.
 He added that the indictment dealt with allegations concerning the town of
 Foca in south-eastern Republika Srpska and with the issue of rape. If copies
 of the latest indictment were required, they would be provided.
   Asked aboutthe exclusive interview reported to have taken place between a Bulgarian daily
 and a Bulgarian national due to be a witness in the Krstic case and who from
 the Tribunal would interview this man, Risley replied that those were operational
 matters and no response could be given.
   Asked for anupdate on the Krstic case, Landale confirmed that Krstic was arrested in December
 last year, but added that no scheduling order for the commencement of the
 trial had yet been received.
   Asked whetherhe expected the trial to commence before the end of the year, Landale, replied
 that he could not say until an order had been received.
   Asked abouta report that stated that an OTP team had been refused entry to Croatia, Risley
 replied that those reports in Hina were fairly inaccurate. He added that there
 was no actual team who were refused entry. The OTP had an office in Zagreb
 with investigators who had not been constrained in any way. He confirmed that
 the OTP were in receipt of a letter from Justice Minister Separovic that indicated
 a refusal on the part of the Government of Croatia to provide security pending
 a request of an investigation by the OTP to look into possible war crimes
 within Croatia.
 He added thatit was a matter of due course that the OTP asked for security from the host
 government regardless of where the investigations were carried out. The
 Prosecutor viewed the letter as an attempt by Croatia to unilaterally limit
 the ability of the Tribunal to investigate crimes of war and to place undue
 conditions on the jurisdiction of the Tribunal within Croatia.
 
 The OTP refusedto accept such conditions. The Tribunal as a matter of policy would chose
 the time and place for their investigations within the region of the former
 Yugoslavia. Further news on that pending investigation under consideration
 in Croatia would be given in due course.
 
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