| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 17.07.2002
 
 Time: 12:00 p.m.
 
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 
 
 
 ChristianChartier, Chief of Public Information Services, made the following statement:
 
 
 Todayis the World Day for International Justice. We are very proud of being at the
 service of international law, and we believe that the best way to celebrate
 this day is by carrying on our work with clear determination and in full transparency.
 
 Inthis regard, I would like to state as strongly as possible that persons reporting,
 as I have seen over the past two days, that the Tribunal has established a system
 through which its accused would be authorised to receive up to 10% of defence
 costs as compensation for their custody and/or in order to support their family,
 are at the very least ill-informed. There is no such kick-back system in place
 at the Tribunal, for obvious reasons. It has never been contemplated, it has
 never been established, and it never will be.
 
 Inthe case The Prosecutor v. Nikola Sainovic and Dragoljub Ojdanic, the
 Bench of the Appeals Chamber has granted the Prosecution leave to appeal against
 the provisional release Decision of 26 June.
 
 NextTuesday, the President, the Prosecutor and the Registrar will be in New York.
 The President and the Prosecutor have been invited to appear before the UN Security
 Council to discuss the Report, made public two weeks ago, on the Judicial Status
 of the Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the Prospects for Referring Certain
 Cases to National Courts.
 
 Aspreviously announced, on Thursday and Friday of last week the Judges held their
 regular summer Plenary Session. A press release will be issued in due course,
 providing you with more details on the significant reforms adopted with the
 view of strengthening the position of Defence Counsels appearing before the
 ICTY.
 
 On-goingtrials continue as scheduled in the Milosevic, Galic, Stakic, Simic and others,
 Brdjanin and Talic, and Naletilic and Martinovic cases. In the Naletilic and
 Martinovic case, you will have no doubt noticed that the Defence case opened
 yesterday.
 
 Besidesthe on-going trials, I would like to mention a number of additional proceedings
 to take place in the two coming days:
 
 
  On Thursdayat 2.15 p.m. in courtroom III, there will be a status conference in the case
 The Prosecutor v. Enver Hadzihasanovic, Mehmed Alagic and Amir Kubura.
 To be discussed among other topics is a request by Enver Hadzihasanovic
 and Amir Kubura to change their conditions of provisional release, namely
 to be authorised to travel beyond the limits of Sarajevo in order to visit
 family members and to assist in the preparation of their defence cases.
 
 
  On Friday,in courtroom I, at 2.15 p.m., a status conference will be held in the case
 The Prosecutor v. Vidoje Blagojevic, Dragan Obrenovic, Dragan Jokic and
 Momir Nikolic; this will be followed by a hearing on the motion for provisional
 release filed by Dragan Obrenovic on 11 June and on an expected motion for
 provisional release to be filed by Vidoje Blagojevic. The Defence for Vidoje
 Blagojevic informed the Chamber earlier this week that a provisional release
 motion is about to be filed. This application brings up to nine the number
 of accused currently seeking provisional release. One of the applications
 filed is by Momcilo Gruban, I can now tell you that a Decision on his provisional
 release is expected to be issued later today. Another of the accused seeking
 provisional release is Mile Mrksic. His motion will be considered on Friday
 afternoon at 4.15 p.m.
 
   Withregard to recent court rulings:
 
 
 
  In the casesrelating to the Omarska and Keraterm Camps, following the Prosecution’s motion
 for joinder, on 16 July Trial Chamber III ordered the Prosecution to file
 further clarifications on the charges, either new or existing.
 
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor v. Milomir Stakic, on 10 July, Trial Chamber II dismissed
 a confidential motion by the Defence to exclude the testimony of Mevludin
 Sejmenovic.
 
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor v. Momcilo Krajisnik and Biljlana Plavsic, on 12 July,
 Trial Chamber III denied the Prosecution’s application for an appeal against
 its Decision of 18 June to exclude evidence and to limit the scope of the
 trial.
 
 
 
   Interms of legal filings, the following:
 
 
 Firstly,with regard to the cases in front of the Appeals Chamber:
 
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor v. Radoslav Brdjanin and Momir Talic, on 15 July the
 Prosecution filed its response to the submissions by Jonathan Randal’s lawyers
 in support of their appeal against the Decision to compel him to appear as
 a witness. Meanwhile, the Bench that will consider the merits of this appeal
 has been constituted as follows: Judge Jorda, presiding, Judge Shahabuddeen,
 Judge Güney, Judge Gunawardana and Judge Meron.
 
 Withregard to cases in front of a Trial Chamber:
 
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor v. Stanislav Galic, the Defence is seeking leave to
 appeal against the Trial Chamber’s Decision of 3 July not to challenge the
 qualification as expert-witnesses of two OTP employees.
 
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor v. Blagojevic and others, on 16 July, the Prosecution
 filed a consolidated response to Defence motions challenging the form of the
 Indictment.
 
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor v. Mile Mrskic, on 12 July, the defendant filed a motion
 challenging alleged defects in the form of the Indictment.
 
 
  In the caseThe Prosecutor against Slobodan Milosevic, we have received two Prosecution
 filings:
 
 1.a reply to the observations by the amici curiae on the Prosecution’s
 appeal of the Decision of the Trial Chamber not to admit the testimony of
 two OTP investigators
 
 2. an application for an order directing the FRY to produce documents.
 
 Finally,I am glad to inform you that the following translations into French of documents
 initially issued in English are now available:
 
 1.These are firstly la Décision du greffier de suspendre l’aide juridictionnelle
 accordée jusqu’à récemment à Zoran Zigic
 
 2. And secondly, two documents relating to two interlocutory appeals. The
 first filed in the Milosevic case ‘appel en date du 27 juin contre la décision
 relative à l’admission du résumé de prueve produits par
 un témoin’ and the second filed in the Sainovic/Ojdanic case ‘oppostion
 conjointe des défendants à la demande de l’accusation d’autorisation
 d’interjeter appel, et la réponse de l’accusation à cette opposition
 conjointe’.
 
 Asusual, copies of most of the documents that have been mentioned have been prepared
 for you. Copies of others can be requested from us, the only condition being
 for you to be patient.
 
 Iam now happy to turn the floor over to the Office of the Prosecutor.
 
 
 FlorenceHartmann, Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor made the following statement:
 
 
 TheProsecutor will visit Belgrade on Friday. It will be a short working visit relating
 to issues of cooperation and will last for only a few hours.
 
 
 Questions: 
 
   Askedfor further elaboration, concerning the document mentioned relating to an
 application by the Prosecution for an order directing the FRY to produce documents,
 Hartmann said that this document highlighted the problems the OTP faced when
 requesting specific documents from Belgrade. It explained why, in certain
 cases, the OTP had to continually speak on the subject of cooperation, despite
 the many public statements on the part of the Yugoslav authorities and other
 authorities in the former Yugoslavia, that they were cooperating with the
 Tribunal.
   Morespecifically, Hartmann added that the OTP had requested the statement Mr.
 Milosevic gave when he was arrested in April 2001 in Belgrade. She added that
 Milosevic’s lawyer had given large extracts of the statement to the public
 and media. The statement was published in the former Yugoslavia and all over
 the world and related to the support Milosevic had given to the Bosnian and
 Croatian Serbs during the war. It was something that the OTP was interested
 in and the OTP had requested a copy of the official statement from the authorities
 since it did not want to have to rely on press articles. The OTP did not receive
 any answer from Belgrade and the statement was not provided. This is why the
 OTP was now asking for Trial Chamber support.
   Askedwhether the motion related to one particular document, Hartmann replied that
 the OTP faced this kind of problem constantly. This particular case led to
 this request. The OTP had requested the Chamber to help with this particular
 problem. Prior to this motion, the OTP had made constant requests to the authorities,
 these were refused. This was a document that had been presented before a court
 in Belgrade, it was an example of the kind of document the OTP was looking
 for, she concluded.
   Ajournalist stated that the document was broadly used in the Morten Torkildsen
 expert report. Asked whether this meant that he had also not received the
 statement. Hartmann replied that the OTP wanted to use official documents
 in the trial and not press articles. The document existed and it was something
 the OTP wished to receive.
   Askedto confirm whether or not Torkildsen had seen the actual statement, Hartmann
 replied that Torkildsen had written an expert report about the Milosevic trial.
 The OTP wanted the document to be provided to them to be used in the trial.
 The document could not fall under any special state secret act as it had already
 been given to the press.
   Chartieradded that from a procedural standpoint, a distinction had to be made between
 an investigator accessing a document and being authorised to read and quote
 from it and the Prosecution getting, through official channels, a copy of
 a document. There was a difference between an expert report and a document
 likely to be tendered in court as an exhibit, he added.
   Askedwho was refusing to give the document to the OTP, Hartmann replied that all
 the details were in the motion. The decision had been taken by the National
 Council for Cooperation. All the answers could be found in the motion, she
 concluded.
   Askedfor a general impression on how good the cooperation was, as far as documents
 were concerned, from the Council for cooperation, Hartmann replied that due
 to the Prosecutor’s upcoming visit to Belgrade, she would not answer this
 question now. Cooperation was not going very well, but she did not want to
 give any details or qualify how it was going. It was better to allow the Prosecutor
 to give a summary of this after her visit.
   Askedfor further elements of the agenda of the Prosecutor’s visit, Hartmann replied
 that it was a very short visit and she would not give details apart from the
 fact that the Prosecutor would meet with officials at the Federal level and
 at the level of the Government of Serbia.
   Askedhow it was possible that Mr. Kastratovic, the lawyer requested by Mr. Martic
 to defend him, had been assigned by the Registrar, Chartier replied that Mr.
 Kastratovic had never been assigned to Mr. Martic and that another lawyer,
 Mr. Knoops, had been assigned to him.
   Ajournalist stated that both Mr. Knoops and Mr. Martic had filed requests for
 Martic’s provisional release despite the fact that Martic had complained about
 Knoops filing anything on his behalf. Asked whether Martic was now being defended
 by nobody and how would this situation would be resolved, Chartier replied
 that there were problems with the requested appointment of a specific lawyer.
 Awaiting a solution to this problem, and in order to protect the rights of
 the accused to be defended and represented in proceedings before the Tribunal,
 Knoops had been assigned to him. A few weeks ago the Trial Chamber dealing
 with this case had ordered that all the parties including the lawyer requested
 by Martic, the assigned defence lawyer and the registry to make submissions
 to the Trial Chamber to clear up the matter. As long as a Decision had not
 been taken everything stood as it was.
   Askedwhy Knoops was filing requests on his behalf, Chartier replied that it was
 because he was the assigned lawyer and he was fully entitled to do so. He
 was not aware that Martic ever filed any complaint in writing asking not to
 be defended by this defence lawyer.
   Askedfor a copy of the 92 bis statement submitted today in court, Chartier
 replied that Rule 92 bis statements were subject to specific procedure.
 So far, this procedure had been that the statements would be made public on
 two conditions, that they had been submitted and that the witness had appeared
 in court. In this case the second condition could not be met so he would have
 to check how the Registry would deal with it.
   Askedto confirm that all documents not filed under seal should be public, Chartier
 replied that this was a simplistic representation of the situation, and that
 he would be happy to discuss the matter further after the briefing.
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