| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 14 May 1999
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Today, Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following
 announcements:
 
 In the Simic andOthers case:
 
 On 7 May 1999,the President of the Tribunal ordered the assignment of Judge Cassese to the
 Appeals Chamber in the light of the withdrawal of Judge Riad pursuant to Sub-rule
 15(D)(i) of the Rules. The Chamber is currently considering an interlocutory
 appeal by Stevan Todorovic regarding the Trial Chambers decision not to
 hear an evidentiary hearing. The Appeals Chamber is now comprised as follows:
 President Kirk McDonald, Vice-President Shahabuddeen, Judge Cassese, Judge Tieya
 and Judge Nieto-Navia.
 
 In the same case,on 10 May 1999, Trial Chamber III (Judges Robinson (Presiding), Hunt and Bennouna)
 issued a Scheduling Order for the trial. In reference to the Prosecutors
 Motion for Judicial Notice of common knowledge and adjudicated facts, filed
 on 10 February 1999, the Trial Chamber ordered that: "(1) the
 Prosecution shall by Friday 14 May 1999, and in consultation with the Defence,
 file a list of agreed facts for consideration by the Trial Chamber in connection
 with the motion Sand alsoC (2) (
) file any admissions and a statement
 of other matters which are not in dispute pursuant to Rule 73 bis B (ii); (3)
 the Defence shall file their pre-trial briefs by Monday 31 May 1999; (4) the
 Prosecution shall file its list of the order of witnesses by Tuesday 1 June
 1999; and (5) subject to further order, the trial in this matter shall commence
 on Tuesday 22 June 1999".
 
 Lastly in theSimic and Others case, on 10 May 1999, Trial Chamber III issued an order for
 Milan Simic to attend the trial proceedings on a daily basis as from
 Tuesday 22 June 1999 and to surrender himself to the United Nations Detention
 Unit (
) not less than 2 weeks prior to the commencement of the trial.
 This follows Milan Simics provisional release for reasons of ill health
 on 26 March 1998.
 
 In the Furundzijacase: On 7 May 1999, Counsel for Anto Furundzija filed a motion for extension
 of time in which to file the Defendants appellate brief pursuant to Sub-rule
 127. According to the Defence, the Prosecution has "no serious objection"
 to the Motion. The appellate brief is currently due on 21 May 1999.
 
 In the Krsticcase, on 6 May 1999, Trial Chamber I (Judges Jorda (Presiding), Riad and Rodrigues)
 granted in part a Defence preliminary Motion on the form of the indictment dated
 1 March 1999 in which the Defence argued that the indictment was too vague.
 
 The Trial Chamberordered the Prosecutor "to specify or clarify the indictment in respect
 of the points relating to the responsibility of the accused without, however,
 disclosing the names of the accused". However, the Trial Chamber
 decided that the nature and scope of the crimes as well as the type of responsibility
 charged in this instance cannot be precisely indicated, therefore "the
 Prosecutor cannot be blamed".
 
 Finally in theBlaskic case, on 12 May 1999, further to its Orders of 25 March 1999, Trial
 Chamber I (Judges Jorda (Presiding), Shahabuddeen and Rodrigues) ordered that
 General Philippe Morillon, the former UNPROFOR Commander, and Mr. Jean-Pierre
 Thebault, former Chief of the European Community Monitoring Mission, appear
 before it on 16 June 1999.
 
 The Trial Chamberspecified the issues to be addressed in the testimony and outlined the procedure
 for the deposition which will be closed to the public. The Trial Chamber further
 specified that representatives of the French Government and, in the case of
 General Morillon, of the UN Secretary-General may be present during the testimony
 and may address the Trial Chamber to present reasoned motions aimed at preserving
 any higher interest which they have been assigned to protect.
 
 Copies of thePresidents speech that she gave to the Council for Foreign Relations in
 New York on 12 May and the Prosecutors speech she gave yesterday at the
 launch of the ICC Coalitions Global Ratification Campaign are available.
 We also have an updated fact sheet.
 
   
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 Paul Risley, Spokesmanfor the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP), announced that the Chief Prosecutor
 and Deputy Prosecutor had just returned from the Former Yugoslav Republic of
 Macedonia (FYROM) where they met the Justice, Interior and Deputy Foreign Ministers.
 They discussed the Tribunals presence in the country (investigators are
 in Albania and FYROM) and thanked them for their cooperation. The meetings were
 cordial and productive. They also met the Commander of the NATO Rapid Reaction
 Corps, General Michael Jackson. They discussed operational aspects and also
 future entry to Kosovo, emphasising again how important it was that the Tribunal
 gained entry to Kosovo quickly. They also met other organisations and relief
 agencies. Lastly he announced that the Prosecutor intended to go to Albania
 in the next few weeks.
 
   
   QUESTIONS:
 
   Asked abouta wire report based on statements made by a minister of the Republika Sprska
 that the Prosecutor said she would give them some names on sealed indictments
 on condition that they kept those names secret, Risley replied that he was
 not familiar with the report nor of any comment having been made by the Prosecutors
 office and this was something that was unlikely in any case to be announced
 by the OTP.
   Asked whetherthere was any further information on the witnesses in the Blaskic case and
 whether the remaining four were going to appear and when, Landale replied
 that he expected further orders concerning for the four to be issued, as had
 happened with General Morillon and Mr Thebault.
   Asked aboutan article in Le Monde that said that Milosovic would agree to NATO terms
 on condition that he be granted immunity, Risley replied that the Prosecutor
 had been asked a similar question and had replied that the Tribunal got its
 authority from the Security Council and did not take instructions from individuals
 or states.
   Asked whetherthe Security Council could then instruct the Tribunal to grant immunity, Risley
 answered that the Security Council had already given authority to the Tribunal
 and could not then change it without revoking the Tribunals charter.
   Asked whetherRisley could give an assessment on how investigations were progressing, he
 replied that there were currently teams in Tirana and Skopje. He said that
 the current situation represented the largest challenge to investigators in
 terms of having people on the ground. The investigators were working round
 the clock and the OTP were hoping to bring in different shifts of investigators,
 he said. The investigators were receiving many reports and were working in
 agreement with other organisations to aid screening and directing people to
 investigators. This represented the beginning of a lengthy process, he said.
 It was also critical that investigators got to the actual crime sites themselves.
 Crime sites would need securing, witnesses would need to be found and forensic
 evidence gathered. Investigators were investigating very recent crimes which
 meant new challenges for investigators, he added.
   Asked whetherthe investigators had found a willingness by the refugees to appear in court
 cases, Risley replied that they had found them willing and the Tribunal was
 working together with other organisations to keep track of those who had given
 statements.
   Asked who theProsecutor had talked to regarding access to Kosovo and what the reaction
 had been, Risley answered that the Prosecutor and Deputy Prosecutor had visited
 Brussels and met NATO commanders and had been to New York previously meet
 the Head of Peacekeeping at the UN. Any initial force on the ground would
 probably have elements of UN or NATO and the Prosecutor discussed Tribunal
 access with them. The Prosecutor had received a positive reaction from General
 Michael Jackson, he added.
   Asked was thisnot a political question and had the Prosecutor received any reaction, Risley
 agreed that it was a political question and said that the US Secretary of
 State had said publicly that the Tribunal would be able to investigate, but
 otherwise it was too early to be able to tell political reaction.
   Asked whetherconfirmation had been received that General Morillon would attend and had
 the French Government accepted the conditions, Landale replied that it was
 his understanding that the General was coming and he had neither seen nor
 heard anything from the French Government to indicate otherwise.
   Asked whethera picture was beginning to emerge from Kosovo, Risley answered not yet, there
 was still much that was unknown. The level of atrocities was still difficult
 to guage, he added.
   Asked whetherthe Prosecution intended to appeal in the Alexsovski case, Risley answered
 that the Prosecution did intend to appeal, although on what grounds would
 not be known until the written judgement was released.
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