| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing.
 It is merely a summary.
 
 ICTY Weekly Press Briefing 
 Date: 11.05.2005
 
 Time: 12.15
 
 Registry and Chambers:
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the
 following statement:
 
 Good afternoon,  
 Tomorrow, the 11 bis Referral Bench willhold a hearing on the Prosecutor’s request to refer the case against
 Mrksic, Sljivancanin and Radic to either Croatia or Serbia and Montenegro
 starting at 9 a.m. in Courtroom I. Representatives from both governments
 have been invited to be present in court and to give oral submissions.
 There will be a status conference in this case tomorrow at 2.30
 p.m. in Courtroom II.
 
 As I announced last week, there will also be an11 bis hearing on the Prosecutor’s request to refer the case
 against Todovic and Rasevic to Bosnia and Herzegovina tomorrow at
 2.15 p.m. The Referral Bench has invited the Government of Bosnia
 and Herzegovina to attend the hearing and present oral submissions,
 should it wish to do so.
 
 The Judges in the Milosevic case yesterday issuedan Order in which they affirmed that they would be rendering a Decision
 in the contempt case against Kosta Bulatovic this Friday, but also
 stated that Mr. Bulatovic did not need to return to The Hague. We
 will of course endeavor to get you that Decision as soon as we receive
 it on Friday.
 
 This week, ICTY Outreach is hosting a working visit to the ICTYby Judges of the Supreme Court of Serbia.
 
 The working visit, which has been organised at the request of andsponsored by UNDP in Belgrade is aimed at strengthening the channels
 of communication between the Serbian Judiciary and the ICTY and
 thus facilitating the transfer of knowledge, experience and relevant
 material, accumulated through the practice of the ICTY, to the domestic
 courts.
 
 Last Friday, ICTY Outreach hosted a visit of 20 students from theZagreb Law Faculty. They heard presentations on the organisation
 and functioning of the Tribunal, as well as the applicable law,
 and followed court proceedings. The visit was part of a tour of
 international legal institutions in Luxembourg, Bruxelles and The
 Hague.
 
 The further initial appearance of Milorad Trbichas been scheduled for this afternoon at 2.15 p.m. in Courtroom
 I.
 
 There will be status conferences in The Prosecutorv. Vladimir Lazarevic this Friday at 3.30 p.m. in Courtroom
 I; and in The Prosecutor v. Milutinovic et al. also on Friday
 in the same courtroom at approximately 4.30 p.m.
 
 Office of the Prosecutor: 
 Florence Hartmann of the Office of the Prosecutormade the following statement:
 
 At the invitation of the President, The Prosecutorwill address the OSCE Permanent council on 19 May 2005 in Vienna
 and a visit would be related to the OSCE project related to building
 domestically strong judiciary system.
 
 Secondly the new Cermak/Markac indictment submittedby the OTP has been filed following an Order from the Trial Chamber
 further to the Defense request for additional clarification. I wish
 to underline that the timing of the filing of this new amended indictment
 was in accordance with the Trial Chamber's Order. The OTP filed
 the document on 6 May 2005, on the day of the deadline given to
 the OTP to do so. The new indictment, in terms of the concept and
 participants of the Joint Criminal Enterprise, is not fundamentally
 new or different from the old, existing indictment, except that
 in many places it provides more information, rather than less.
 
 Neither the existing nor the amended indictmentcriminalizes the "Homeland War," nor does it say or even
 suggest that "everyone" in the Croatian Army was a war
 criminal.
 
 Landale reminded the journalists that at this stagethe amended Cermak and Markac indictment was a proposed indictment
 and had not been confirmed by the Judges.
 
 Questions: 
 A journalist asked why persons named in severalcases as being part of Joint Criminal Enterprises had not all been
 indicted, and whether there were certain criteria that had to be
 met in order to be indicted? Hartmann replied that not everybody
 had been indicted by the ICTY. The mandate had never been to indict
 every single individual that had ever been part of the crimes. For
 this reason, the ICTY hoped that local jurisdictions dealing with
 war crimes issues would initiate their own investigations and would
 indict those who had not been indicted by the ICTY.
 
 Asked if the Prosecutor had made a selection basedon seniority to indict, Hartmann replied that several factors played
 a role, for instance the accessibility of documents, evidence material
 and time constraints. She added that this should not prevent anybody
 else continuing the job initiated by the ICTY and it was hoped that
 the local jurisdictions would do just that.
 
 Documents: 
 The Prosecutor v. SlobodanMilosevic
 
 10 May 2005 – Contempt ProceedingsAgainst Kosta Bulatovic: Order On Issuance Of Decision.
 
 The Prosecutor v. DragomirMilosevic
 
 10 May 2005 – 	Prosecution’sResponse To The Accused’s Motion For Provisional Release.
 
 The Prosecutor v. Mrksic etal
 
 10 May 2005 – Letter to RegistryFrom Republic of Croatia.
 
 The Prosecutor v. RadoslavBrdanin
 
 10 May 2005 – Response To Prosecution’sBrief On Appeal.
 
 The Prosecutor v. Sefer Halilovic 
 9 May 2005 – Decision On MotionFor Prosecution Access To Defence Documents Used In Cross-examination
 Of Prosecution Witness.
 
 The Prosecutor v. Rasim Delic 
 10 May 2005 – Decision On MotionSeeking Review Of The Registry Decision Stating That Mr Stephane
 Bourgon Cannot Be Assigned To Represent Rasim Delic.
 
 The Prosecutor v. Milan Martic 
 9 May 2005 – Prosecution ResponseTo Second Defence Motion For Provisional Release.
 
 The Prosecutor v. Haradinajet al.
 
 5 May 2005 – Prosecution’s ResponseTo Defence Motion On Behalf Of Ramush Haradinaj For Provisional
 Release.
 
 The Prosecutor v. Blagojevicand Jokic
 
 9 May 2005 – Prosecution’s BriefOn Appeal.
 
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