| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 27.03.2002
 
 Time: 2:00 p.m.
 
 
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 Good afternoon, 
 As you shouldknow by now, the Milosevic trial will resume on April 8.
 
 In the Stakiccase, on 22 March we received the 'Prosecution's Submission of Statement of
 Expert Witness', which is a report on Prijedor and the Bosnian Krajina by Dr.
 Robert Donia.
 
 Also in the Stakiccase and filed on the same date, we have the Trial Chamber's 'Decision on Prosecution's
 Motion for Reconsideration of Trial Date and Final Scheduling Order'. The Prosecution's
 Motion is denied and a Pre-Trial conference has been provisionally set for 10
 April 2002. The trial will commence on 16 April 2002.
 
 In the Krsticcase, we received a scheduling order on 22 March, ordering that there be a Status
 Conference on 5 April 2002 at 2.30 pm.
 
 On 20 March, wereceived the 'Prosecution Response to Request for Provisional Release for Accused
 [Dragan] Jokic' and then on 21 'Dragan Jokic's Reply' to the Prosecution's Response.
 
 On 22 March inthe Kunarac and others case, we received a scheduling order setting a Status
 Conference for 5 April at 4 pm.
 
 A reminder thatthis afternoon there will be a hearing in the Simic and others case to discuss
 issues pertaining to Rule 15 bis in Courtroom III at 2.30 pm.
 
 Finally, a reminderthat there will be no court proceedings on Friday or Monday due to Easter.
 
 Florence Hartmann,Spokesman for Prosecution, made the following statement:
 
 I am pleased toinform you that I have a new assistant. Her name is Liljana Vodenski Pitesa.
 She will start in April and will have her own telephone line. Liljana speaks
 the two official languages of the Tribunal as well as BCS. I hope she will be
 able to help you when I am not reachable and that it will be easier for your
 work.
 
 I would like toadd that there is some confusion that has arisen today in regards to an alleged
 statement that I made to the newspaper Dan. I strongly deny having said that
 Karadzic was in Montenegro or that any Montenegro officials of former officials
 will testify in the Milosevic trial. I was asked about these questions and I
 answered, as I always do, that according to our information Karadzic is in Republika
 Srpska (RS) and that I do not comment on any witnesses that may testify in any
 trial at the Tribunal.
 
 Questions: 
   Asked whetherthe ICTY could expect any of the accused from the former Yugoslavia to come
 to the Tribunal this month, Landale replied that there were a number of people
 who had been indicted by the Tribunal who were still fugitives. There were
 binding obligations to apprehend and transfer to the Tribunal those people
 so that they might stand trial. The Tribunal expected all states and authorities
 that were in the position, to do so as soon as possible, he concluded.
 Hartmann added
 that the Tribunal had 32 fugitives and that half of the fugitives were believed
 to be in Yugoslavia.
 Asked to comment
 on the statement by Branko Kostic, the former President of Socialist Federal
 Republic of Yugoslavia, that the Prosecution had tried to contact him, Hartmann
 replied that she would not comment on this kind of allegation made in newspapers.
 There were too many and we did not update journalists on people we were meeting,
 she added.
 
 
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