| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 24 March 1999
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Today, Jim Landale, the ICTY Spokesman, made the following announcements:
 
 In the BosanskiSamac case, on 19 March Trial Chamber III issued an order disposing of a number
 of pre-trial motions filed by the Prosecution and the Defence. Among these is
 the decision relating to Stevan Todorovic that, "the Motion to strike
 aliases from the indictment is granted and the Prosecution shall prepare a corrected
 version of the indictment for use in these proceedings."
 
 In the Furundzijacase, the Defence filed a motion on 19 March "for Extension of Time
 to File Appellate Brief" until 21 May 1999. In this they cite the fact
 that the Appeals Chamber had suspended the briefing schedule for appeal until
 the Bureau of the Tribunal had ruled on the Defendants Post Trial Application
 to the Bureau. This application was denied by the Bureau on 10 March.
 
 Also on 19 Marchin the Omarska case, Trial Chamber III granted in part the "Prosecutors
 Motion for Judicial Notice of Adjudicated Facts", filed on 11 January
 1999. In coming to their decision, the Trial Chamber considered that "it
 would be in the interest of judicial economy and would promote an expeditious
 trial for the Trial Chamber to take judicial notice of the adjudicated facts
 upon which the parties are agreed". Adjudicated facts are facts that
 have been established in other cases and that relate to matters in the current
 proceedings.
 
 Finally, on 22March, Trial Chamber III denied a request for the provisional release of the
 accused in the Kordic and Cerkez case.
 
 As usual, copiesof all these documents are available to those who want them.
 
   
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 The Deputy Prosecutor,Mr Graham Blewitt, made the following statement in response to anticipated media
 questions concerning the New York Times article on 21 March 1999 titled "War
 Crimes Panel finds Croat Army "Cleansed" Serbs":
 
 The first pointto be made concerning this article, is that the Prosecutor regrets very much
 that it makes reference to, and indeed quotes from, documents which appear to
 be confidential internal documents of the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP). The
 Prosecutor does not comment on the existence or progress of any investigation,
 and this has been the policy of the Office from its inception. In the same way
 the Prosecutor does not announce or confirm that particular persons are the
 subject of an investigation, in fact we go out of our way to insure that persons
 are not named until publicly indicted. To do otherwise would be unfair to such
 persons if they are not ultimately indicted. They would have a cloud hanging
 over their head with no way to address the injustice. The fact that this article
 mentions that named persons are under investigation is very regrettable.
 
 The second pointto be made is that the Prosecutor is gravely concerned about the means by which
 this information was communicated to the New York Times and is conducting an
 investigation into the matter.
 
 The third pointto be made is that the documents in question, apart from being several months
 old, merely represent expressions of opinion, arguments and hypotheses from
 various staff members of the OTP during the investigative process. It is important
 to understand that the documents do not represent in any way the concluded decisions
 of the Prosecutor. I repeat, the documents are merely work product and do not
 contain the official position of the Office of the Prosecutor.
 
 The Prosecutorencourages vigorous debate within her Office, regarding the strengths or weaknesses
 of the evidence and legal theories which may be applicable to the facts and
 the evidence. Staff are encouraged to identify the broadest possible basis for
 any indictment or prosecution based on the available evidence, and then to test
 this basis by critical analysis and debate. The documents in question do nothing
 more than represent that process in action. The final position on the viability
 of any charge against any person is the sole decision of the Prosecutor, who
 if satisfied that the available evidence is sufficient, then presents an indictment
 to a judge for confirmation.
 
 The next pointto be made is that the public release of this information will have no effect
 on the Prosecutors decision whether to proceed further in this case, nor
 on the timing of any indictment. Whether the motive for making the material
 available to the media was to force the Prosecutors hand to issue the
 indictment or to bring it forward at an earlier time, or whether it was done
 to ensure that she would not issue any indictment at all, the end result is
 that the release of the information will have no such effect. The Prosecutor
 will do what her mandate from the Security Council requires independently and
 objectively and will not allow herself to be influenced or manipulated by outside
 forces.
 
 In conclusion,and noting some more recent media reports arising from the publication of the
 New York Times article, it should be remembered that under the Statute of the
 Tribunal, State co-operation is not conditional upon any State being satisfied
 with the Prosecutors decisions to commence an investigation or to bring
 an indictment. The Prosecutor expects that Croatia will continue to fulfil all
 its international obligations, including the surrender of all indicted persons
 to The Hague.
 
   
 QUESTIONS: 
   Asked if theOTP had any indication where the leak started, Blewitt answered that it had
 clearly started from within the OTP.
   Asked if theNew York Times article could have been a result of speculation, Blewitt answered
 that he did not think that was the case. He added that Justice Arbour, the
 Chief Prosecutor, had spoken to the journalist from the New York Times and
 that it was clear he had been exposed to the information mentioned in the
 article.
   Asked aboutthe consequences for the person who leaked the information, Blewitt replied
 that he did not want to go into that. He said that the OTP would strengthen
 the existing procedures to prevent this from happening again, however he added
 that you could not stop people from talking. He added that there was a general
 feeling of betrayal in the OTP since the leaking had concerned on-going work.
   Asked whetherthe Prosecutor had held discussions with the journalist before of after the
 article had been published, Blewitt answered that Justice Arbour and the journalist
 spoke last Friday, before the article was published on Sunday.
   Asked aboutthe nature of the documents, Blewitt answered that these were purely internal
 work documents which reflected the views of staff in the office and that these
 were not official documents.
   Asked abouta Croatian television report that had suggested that the person who had leaked
 the information had already left the ICTY, Blewitt answered that he was not
 aware of this report and that he did not want to speculate on whether this
 person had left or not.
   Asked if thevisit to the Tribunal yesterday by the Croatian Ambassador was related to
 the New York Times article, Blewitt answered that the contents of the discussions
 were confidential but confirmed that the issue had arisen.
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