| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 21 October 1998
 
 Time: 11.30 a.m.
 
 The ICTY Spokesman,Jim Landale, began todays ICTY briefing by introducing Mr. Gavin Ruxton,
 Senior Legal Advisor to the Prosecutor. On behalf of the Office of the Prosecutor,
 Mr. Ruxton made the following statement:
 
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 The Prosecutor,Justice Louise Arbour, is in New York presenting the Office of the Prosecutor
 budget for the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda to the ACABQ (Advisory
 Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions). The ICTY budget was presented
 last week. The ACABQ is not the end of the process since the budget must be
 approved by the Fifth Committee of the General Assembly, but the ACABQ is an
 important step in the process. At this stage it is not appropriate to give any
 details of the figures.
 
 Last week, theProsecutor announced her intention to lead an investigation team into Kosovo
 (press release 353). The Prosecutor is planning to travel to the Federal Republic
 of Yugoslavia on 5 November 1998. At this stage, no further details of that
 investigative mission will be given, although it is likely that the Prosecutor
 will make a press announcement at the end of her mission to the FRY.
 
 In relation tothat same mission, the Prosecutor has sought an assurance from President Milosevic
 that visas will be forthcoming to allow that visit to take place. At the moment
 visa applications have been submitted to the FRY Embassy in The Hague and we
 are waiting to hear that they have been issued.
 
 The 1998 ExhumationProgramme in Bosnia should be concluded this week. Bad weather has delayed the
 closure of the final mass grave. This years exhumations have all related
 to the Srebrenica investigation. Although work at this last exhumation site
 will be finished, the forensic examinations of the bodies will continue for
 several weeks in the mortuary facility. The Prosecutor is not prepared to make
 any announcement at this stage regarding the specific results of this years
 work, but I can tell you that it has been a successful programme and that we
 have achieved what we set out to do. The work now has to stop over the winter
 months, but we intend that the forensic mass grave exhumation programme will
 start again in 1999. Exhumation work is not something funded in our regular
 UN budget and for next years programme the Prosecutor has recently made
 an appeal to member states of the UN for contributions to the Tribunals
 Trust Fund to allow that work to continue.
 
   
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 The ICTY Spokesman, Jim Landale, made the following announcements:
 
 The further initialappearance by Stevan Todorovic will take place next week.
 
 He has been examinedby a doctor. The doctors finding and the report are confidential but the
 further initial appearance can now continue.
 
 A second amendedindictment against Goran Jelisic and Ranko Cesic was confirmed by Trial Chamber
 I on Monday 19 October 1998. Copies of the amended indictment will be available
 tomorrow afternoon.
 
 On 15 Octoberthe Appeals Chamber dismissed a motion from the Defence in the Tadic case to
 admit further evidence. Copies of that ruling are available on request.
 
 The Kupreskiccase will resume 30 November at 9.30 a.m in Courtroom III, when the Defence
 will start presenting their case.
 
 In the Aleksovskicase, the hearing of rejoinder witnesses finished yesterday. Both parties now
 have to give their submissions for closing arguments before 9 November. Closing
 arguments will be heard from 17 to 20 November.
 
 In the Kordicand Cerkez case, an open session motion hearing is scheduled for Wednesday 28
 October in Courtroom I, once the closed status conference has finished.
 
 Lastly, Landalereminded the press of the election last week of the three new Judges (Press
 Release No. 354).
 
   
 QUESTIONS:  
   Asked whetherJelesic must enter a plea to the charges brought in the amended indictment,
 Landale answered that he did, but added that no new date for this further
 initial appearance had been set.
   Asked whethera date had been set for hearings in the Tadic case before the Appeals Chamber,
 Landale replied that a new date was not yet known.
   Asked whetherSFOR could prevent the Trial Chamber carrying out its plans, especially since
 the Ahmici visit was in the interest of justice, Landale replied that once
 SFOR had received a detailed itinerary of the visit and understood that the
 Trial Chamber intended to explore much of the village on foot, they had advised
 that the mine risk was high. This was the reason that the Judges had called
 off the visit, he added.
   Asked if themine threat had been the only reason for the cancellation of the trip, Landale
 replied that, to his knowledge, the assessment had provided the main basis
 for the decision.
 
 ***** 
 |