| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 25 August 1999
 
 Time: 11:30 p.m.
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for the Registry and Chambers made the following announcements:
 
 First in the Tadiccase, the sentencing hearing on the additional counts that he was found guilty
 on in the judgement of the Appeals Chamber that was scheduled for Monday has
 been cancelled by the Appeals Chamber. A scheduling order from 23 August 1999
 reaffirmed that "the Parties are to file by 25 August 1999 written submissions
 on the issue as to whether the Appeals Chamber should remit to a Trial Chamber,
 and, if so, to which Trial Chamber, the question of sentencing the Appellant
 in respect of the counts on which the Appellant has been found guilty
."
 
 So, pending adecision by the Appeals Chamber on the submissions that it receives from the
 parties, a Trial Chamber could be directed to hold a sentencing hearing. If
 this happens, a date for that sentencing hearing will be announced in the near
 future. If, however, it is decided that the Appeals Chamber is to hold the sentencing
 hearing, this will most likely take place in the next two weeks.
 
 Only after a decisionon the sentencing on the additional counts will the Appeals Chamber determine
 the accuseds appeal against the sentencing judgement handed down by Trial
 Chamber II, which consisted of Judge Gabrielle Kirk McDonald (Presiding), Judge
 Stephen and Judge Vohrah. We will, of course, keep you posted of any developments.
 
 Next, the resumptionof the contempt of court proceedings in the Tadic trial will resume on Monday
 afternoon at 2.30 pm in Courtroom I.
 
 And, the Jelisictrial for genocide will start on Monday at two oclock in Courtroom III.
 
 Finally, issuenumber 6 of the Judicial Bulletin is now available. We have copies of that and
 all the other documents I have mentioned for those interested.
 
 Justice LouiseArbour, the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for the
 former Yugoslavia (ICTY), greeted the assembled press corps and said that this
 was likely to be her last press briefing at the Tribunal. She added that she
 would remain in office until 14 September 1999, however, that she would be on
 leave from the middle of next week. She confirmed that if any matter, (either
 press or Tribunal) required her attendance before this time, she would of course
 be available.
 
 The Prosecutorconfirmed that she had today and yesterday held meetings with Prosecutor designee,
 Carla Del Ponte at the Tribunal. She described their discussions as excellent
 and she added that she was happy to highlight not only the appointment of Carla
 Del Ponte, but also the appointment process itself which she described as having
 produced excellent results. She added that in early June when her departure
 date was announced, alarmist signals emerged indicating the possibility of a
 dramatically long transition period and difficulty in generating a consensus
 on the issue of her replacement. She noted that the selection process and that
 the way in which the appointment of Mrs. Del Ponte had been handled testified
 to the unfailing commitment of the Secretary-General and of the Security Council.
 The process was taken very seriously, she concluded. The success of the process
 in itself should dispel the remaining sentiment that the Tribunal might be construed
 as a fragile institution.
 
 In her view, theTribunal, in general and in particular the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) was
 in excellent shape. She added that the Tribunal was poised to continue doing
 some of its best work, both with respect to the OTP in investigations and prosecutions
 and in courtroom proceedings. She believed that the deployment of the investigative
 efforts in Kosovo demonstrated that the Tribunal was now a mature institution
 that had demonstrated its capacity to work in a real time environment. She felt
 very positive in handing over her office to new leadership, she said.
 
 She added thatthe Tribunal needed to continue to fine-tune the proceedings and operations
 in future. It would be unthinkable for such a novel institution as the Tribunal
 to become settled in its ways. She could see that the Tribunal needed to seek
 and value the advice given by many of its observers. What she was more concerned
 about was the suggestion that the Tribunal required a major overhaul
 to correct a deficiency, which in her view was sometimes exaggerated,
 this being the so-called slowness of the procedures. Firstly, the Tribunal ought
 to be rigorous in identifying problems appropriately before examining corrective
 measures to be taken. She believed that the structure conceived by the Security
 Council and developed by the judges in their conception of the Rules of Procedure
 and Evidence was fundamentally sound.
 
 The structurewas consistent with the major international instruments with respect to human
 rights and had developed a procedural environment that, in her view, was correct,
 sound and respectful of the interests of the Prosecution, the accused and the
 general interest of justice. She believed that, as the Tribunal engaged in a
 process of attempting to perform more expeditiously, it ought to be careful
 not to jeopardize some of the values reflected in the current system.
 
 Almost two weeksago, the Prosecutor visited the Tribunal offices in Kigali and Arusha, where
 she had an exceptionally positive visit, including discussions with members
 of the Government of Rwanda. She added that she was pleasantly surprised by
 a more supportive and positive attitude towards the work of the Tribunal generally
 and especially towards the work of the OTP. This she said was due largely to
 the arrest operations conducted since the summer of 1997 and regularly thereafter,
 targeting high ranking officials and obtaining the support of many African governments
 including Kenya early on and subsequently those of many west African countries.
 She added that the signals had been the most positive received in her three
 years attending to the activities of the Tribunal for Rwanda. The question of
 the speed of proceedings was raised constantly, and again she reiterated that
 the Tribunal must seek ways to collectively improve performance and to meet
 the expectations of the population. In Rwanda, the remaining challenge with
 respect of the OTP was not only efforts made to depict genocide as a major criminal
 enterprise of conspiracy and to bring these cases to completion, but to complete
 all the remaining challenging parts of the investigative agenda.
 
 In connectionwith the fact that next week marks the 60th anniversary of the initiation
 by Hitler of World War Two, the Prosecutor was asked for her opinion of the
 meaning of the work of the Tribunal, what she believed had changed in the last
 60 years, and whether she believed any progress had been made. She replied that
 there had been more progress made in the last five years than in the proceeding
 50 with respect to the enforcement of International Humanitarian law. In the
 last five years the Tribunal had brought to the forefront the necessity to control
 the worst fallout of modern armed conflict and warfare. Whether this was sufficiently
 progressive to elevate the recourse to armed conflict as a way of settling a
 dispute in the international forum, she believed this to be for historians to
 answer. She believed that the Tribunal had shown enough determination for these
 efforts to be sustained and the permanent court be set in place. We should be
 entitled to see in the longer term a deterrent effect that would alleviate the
 suffering not only associated with war, but associated with the commission of
 atrocities during a time of war, a time when civilian populations were at their
 utmost vulnerability, when their protectors had either collapsed or were antagonistic
 to their own well being in the case of internal armed conflict. To think that
 the Tribunals had now launched proceedings which were supported by not only
 the Security Council but by the international community, made it very clear
 that the culture of impunity of the mighty was no longer part of the landscape
 of the next millenium.
 
 Asked whethershe was satisfied with the success of the OTP, Arbour replied that she felt
 that the Prosecution was successful if justice was done. That did not mean that
 you had to be the winner of any or all factual and legal propositions that were
 advanced, particularly in an environment in which these factual and legal propositions
 were very novel and were advanced on the basis of an analysis of a body of law
 that were still not fully developed. For instance, an unsuccessful attempt in
 maintaining something that was clearly a crime against humanity was not also
 a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions, must not be seen as a failing of the
 prosecution. In general terms what is seen in the courtrooms of both Tribunals
 was never meant to be a vindication of the Prosecution, but a demonstration
 of the capacity of the international community to do justice in a just, fair
 transparent, public and acceptable way. She stated that she believed that judged
 against these conditions, the two institutions had been very successful and
 as good as any model of criminal justice you would want to turn to in any of
 the major functioning sophisticated democracies.
 
 With the numbersof arrests having multiplied by five since her arrival, the Prosecutor was asked
 whether it was a major disappointment that the most famous names were still
 at large. She replied on many occasions that it would be a great service to
 justice, in particular to victims of the kinds of atrocities that the Tribunal
 was exposing, if in fact we stayed away from a characterisation of success solely
 based on name recognition. In both Tribunals there were people who might not
 have names known in general public opinion, names as startling as Karadzic or
 Milosevic, but whose position and commission of crime deserved serious attention.
 This did not mean to suggest that she would not be looking forward to pressing
 for the arrest of all the indictees. There was significance to demonstrating
 in concrete terms that no one would ever be outside the reach of the law. The
 small fish - big fish debate had not been heard for a least a year. It had been
 noted that people were being indicted and arrested at the level of responsibility
 that showed that the momentum was well on its way and that everyone should feel
 very seriously exposed. She added that she might have liked to see a speedier
 rate of arrest than she had seen, however there were not a lot of grounds for
 complaint as to the commitment of SFOF which was now solidly established.
 
 Asked whethershe was confident that some day Karadzic and Milosevic would be detained by
 SFOR, she replied that she could not say publicly why she was confident and
 that she would not expose strategies the OTP had initiated or what kind of discussion
 it was having with others to explore various avenues to bring everyone to justice.
 It would be counter productive to be explicit but she believed that as you observed
 the process there was no doubt that the indictments were being targeted at a
 higher level. Only occasionally were older indictments revisited when opportunities
 presented themselves. There was a clear pattern of accused being brought into
 custody that were of a rank that two years ago might have led them to believe
 that they were outside the reach of any international effort. She was confident
 on those grounds that the momentum was moving in the right direction with the
 right resources.
 
 Asked in her experiencehow cooperation with certain countries had improved, she replied that this process
 had its low points and the lowest one was when formal action had to be taken;
 when the Tribunal felt that the lack of cooperation in crippling the investigative
 efforts. With regards to the rest, she would not issue periodic reports with
 respect to the performance of either the usual willing partners or of those
 who had in the past been less inclined to be supportive of the Tribunal. In
 general terms, we had no reason not to be confident that the Security Council
 will in some way by realistic means bring compliance, she said. Like any relationship,
 we had on-going information providers, who sometimes become distracted on other
 issues and might be less supportive of a particular initiative the Tribunal
 was pursuing. This could be and was managed in the normal course of business,
 she added.
 
 Asked about thecontents of the meeting with Mrs. Del Ponte, Louise Arbour replied that she
 would not divulge the contents of their discussion, only that they were very
 productive in the short time at their disposal, several matters were reviewed
 and a number of informal discussions were had. She assured Del Ponte that she
 would be available for further meetings if necessary. It was a very fruitful
 and productive visit and everyone was looking forward to her imminent arrival,
 she said.
 
 Asked what adviceshe had for Mrs. Del Ponte, the Prosecutor replied that any advice she might
 have would be communicated in private. She added that she could offer her own
 perception on many issues, but no advice to a particularly competent and professional
 prosecutor.
 
 Asked whetherdocument IT-99-35 was an indictment for the Croatian President, Landale replied
 that IT-99-35 was a miscellaneous file for cases and correspondence and documents
 that did not necessarily relate to anything specific. He added that various
 comments had been taken out of context in a certain Croatian wire service which
 had caused some excitement over the issue.
 
 Asked how manyongoing cases related to genocide and why it was so difficult to get the evidence
 in these cases, Landale replied that the Jelisic case was the only genocide
 case actually in the trial process at this moment. Jelisic had pleaded guilty
 to all other counts on the original indictment but not guilty to the one genocide
 charge. For that reason the trial for that one count would begin on Monday,
 he said.
 
 Asked why it wasso difficult to prove genocide, Arbour replied that she did not believe it was
 difficult to prove, however, that it had many very specific elements, including
 the intention to eliminate a group in whole or in part. Some intent could be
 argued to be inferred by the magnitude of the extermination efforts. In other
 cases an assessment would be made of what kind of evidence could be tendered,
 for example statements made by the accused and or his co- conspirators. In the
 Akayesu case in Rwanda, virtually all the cases had genocide counts in them.
 There was not a single case left where the charge was simply crimes against
 humanity. As the cases moved through trial, the Tribunal could assess what would
 be required to prove genocide. Sometimes that element was provable by words
 spoken by the accused or by literature and propaganda emanating from the accused
 and or his co conspirators that showed very explicitly the purpose of the extermination
 mission. In other cases that purpose was not expressly stated and circumstantial
 evidence was required to infer that the intention was in fact genocidal.
 
 Asked whethershe had discussed sealed indictments with Carla Del Ponte, Arbour replied that
 amongst other Prosecution strategies in place in the OTP, sealed indictments
 had been discussed.
 
 On the questionof her view of the role of the media in the coverage of the Tribunal and the
 two conflicts, Arbour replied that the role of the media in covering the tribunal
 was critical beyond anything one would expect in a national criminal justice
 system for the reason that the fundamental values of criminal justice that were
 essential to its credibility was traditionally local and public. Certainly in
 the common law world the roots of the jury system were based on the idea of
 the trial in the market place where the community came together in a criminal
 trial to reaffirm its commitment to shared values and to see that justice was
 done in an acceptable manner, that the system was not worse behaved than the
 offenders themselves. One of the great challenges of international criminal
 justice was to preserve these characteristics in the market place of Kigali
 or Belgrade. To perform this, the Tribunal relied on the modern means of the
 media and through particularly a free and independent press. The role of an
 educated and fair press was absolutely fundamental. What role it played in the
 conflict spoke for itself. It was now a feature of the documentation of armed
 conflict that the media is now more interested, not only in unfolding warfare
 but also the atrocities of human rights taking place.
 
 Asked what shewould say to outgoing NATO Secretary-General Javier Solana and NATO SACEUR General
 Wesley Clark if she saw them today, she replied that she would say thank you
 and goodbye.
 
 The briefing wasreconvened for the Prosecutor, Justice Louise Arbour to make the following announcement
 on the arrest of General Momir Talic:
 
 "On 12 March1999, the Prosecutor, Justice Louise Arbour, signed an indictment charging General
 Momir Talic, the Chief of Staff of the Army of Republika Srpska, together with
 Radislav Brdjanin, with a crime against humanity, namely persecutions on political,
 racial or religious grounds. The indictment, which was confirmed by Judge Rodrigues
 on 14 March 1999, alleges that during 1992 the accused, as members of the Crisis
 Staff (Krizni Stab) of the Autonomous Region of Krajina (ARK), ordered, implemented,
 supported and assisted a plan designed to expel the Bosnian Muslim, Bosnian
 Croat and other non-Serb populations from the municipalities designated as part
 of the ARK, including the Prijedor municipality of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
 
 On 6 July 1999,the accused Radislav Br|anin was arrested by SFOR troops in Bosnia and Herzegovina
 and was transferred to The Hague where he is awaiting trial.
 
 Acting on informationthat the accused Momir Talic was travelling to Austria to attend a conference,
 on 24 August 1999 the Prosecutor arranged for a warrant of arrest directed to
 the Republic of Austria to be delivered to the Austrian authorities. Acting
 on this warrant, Momir Talic was arrested today and taken into custody in Vienna
 by those authorities. It is expected that the accused will appear before the
 local courts in Austria before his eventual surrender to the Tribunal in the
 near future.
 
 The Prosecutorwishes to express her gratitude to the Austrian authorities for acting promptly
 on the warrant of arrest and for their very professional actions in apprehending
 Momir Talic. It is anticipated that the accused Momir Talic and Radislav Brdjanin
 will be tried together in a joint trial".
 
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