| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date: 2 May 2001
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 
  	Theclosing arguments in the Krstic case have now been rescheduled for 5 to 8 June.
 The final briefs are to be filed by 29 May.
 
 
 Thesentencing hearing in the Todorovic case will now begin at 0900 hours on Friday
 4 May, instead of 0930 hours as previously advertised in the update.
 
 
 On27 April we received the Defence Brief on sentencing in the Todorovic case.
 The Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) filed their brief on 17 April 2001.
 
 
 Inthe Simic and others case, on 27 April we received a joint statement of admissions
 by the parties and matters that are not in dispute filed jointly by the OTP
 and the Defence.
 
 
 Inthe Plavsic and Krajisnik case, we received on 27 April the Trial Chamber’s
 decision on her motion for a separate trial, filed on 9 April. In the decision,
 the Trial Chamber denied the motion considering that the accused had not raised
 any new relevant arguments since the Trial Chamber’s joinder decision of 23
 February 2001, in which it stated that there would be "no conflict of
 interest in joining the trials and that to do so would be in the interests of
 justice".
 
   
 OFFICEOF THE PROSECUTOR
 
 Jean Jacques Joris Advisor to the Prosecutor, made the following statement:
 
 
 	TheProsecutor will be travelling this afternoon to Paris, where she will meet with
 the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr. Vedrine, the Minister of Defence, Mr. Richard
 and the Minister of Justice, Madame Lebranchu. They will discuss subjects of
 mutual interest including the arrests of fugitives in Bosnia and the present
 status of cooperation between Belgrade and the ICTY.
 
 
   
 	QUESTIONS: 
 
   	Askedwhether it was just a coincidence that the Prosecutor was visiting Paris just
 two days after the visit by the Prime Minister of Serbia, Joris replied that
 it was a coincidence. He added that the OTP had been trying to schedule the
 trip to Paris for the last month and a half. There was agreement on the principle
 of a visit, however, there were some difficulties on both sides to find a
 date. The visit was confirmed on Friday of last week and for this reason it
 was not mentioned in last weeks’ press briefing, he concluded.
 
   Asked whetherthe French Government was playing an intermediary role between Belgrade and
 the Tribunal, Joris replied that France was not assuming the role of intermediary
 between the Tribunal and Serbia. He added that it was an interesting hypothesis,
 but one which was, to his knowledge, without foundation.
 
 	A journalistpointed out that the Prosecutor had been quoted as saying that she wished
 to establish an ICTY OTP ‘tracking team’ modeled on a similar team in the
 Rwanda Tribunal. Asked how this team would work, and what differences there
 would be between this team and an investigator who through the course of their
 investigations also gathered information concerning the whereabouts of suspects
 and who had in the past assisted SFOR and other authorities, Joris replied
 that he could not make any comment about the ‘tracking team’ in Rwanda as
 he worked specifically for the ICTY and he was not aware of the specifics.
 He went on to say that the Prosecutor had been discussing the idea before
 calling it a ‘special taskforce’. Because it was difficult, with SFOR operating
 under military rules of engagement, to detach a small group of people dedicated
 solely to the purpose of locating fugitives, why not establish a group that
 would operate not along military rules of engagement but rather as a police
 force? That was the idea that was being discussed by the Prosecutor, NATO
 officials and with some countries. The Prosecutor expected some answers on
 those questions. These people would not be in charge of carrying out the arrests
 themselves, but strictly with locating the fugitives precisely and quickly.
 
 
   	Asked whowould be in control of this team, the Tribunal or NATO, Joris replied that
 the Tribunal would be in control of the team. The team would be under the
 responsibility of the Tribunal but the arrests would remain under the responsibility
 of SFOR. This was all being discussed, so the final outline (if the idea was
 accepted) could be slightly different.
 
   	Asked whetherthe International Police Task Force (IPTF) had a role of this kind, Landale
 replied that the IPTF was unarmed and did not have an executive mandate.
 
 	Joris addedthat the IPTF were slightly different. Their responsibilities did not cover
 the location of fugitives. He added that the term ‘police task force’ was
 given to the general idea previously, now the Prosecutor favoured the expression
 ‘tracking team’ because that was what the team would be about. Not police,
 because they would not be carrying out the arrests, solely locating people.
 Like a scouting group, he concluded.
 
 
   	Askedwhether this addressed the central problem that SFOR did not wish to arrest
 these people and therefore what would the new team achieve, Joris replied
 that when the Prosecutor asked the question why fugitives were not arrested,
 why was it that Karadzic and other fugitives were still at large after five
 to six years, the answer she received was that these people were moving quickly,
 they knew the terrain and they were protected so it was hard for SFOR to locate
 them. The obvious answer was that the OTP would help SFOR to locate them.
 It was not a matter of political will, since SFOR was ready to carry out the
 arrests. Other explanations might be valid, however, he could not speculate
 on this. The official answer received by the Prosecutor was that the fugitives
 could not be located, so the OTP wished to see if it could help in locating
 them.
 
   	Asked whythe Prosecutor did not just ask the politicians why they did not wish to arrest
 the fugitives, Joris replied that this question was asked systematically to
 politicians and to Governments and the answer consistently given was that
 everyone was ready to arrest the fugitives, however they were hard to locate.
 There was no reason for the Prosecutor to doubt that. If the problem was one
 of locating the fugitives then the OTP wished to see how this situation could
 be solved. Obviously a tracking team would be such an answer. He speculated
 that, if the tracking team told SFOR where a fugitive was and nothing was
 done, then this would be a different situation, he concluded.
 
   	Asked whetherthis tracking team was only mandated for Bosnia and why, when it was reported
 that most fugitives had left Bosnia for Serbia, Joris replied that the whereabouts
 of those inside Serbia was well known so it was not a matter of locating most
 of them.
 
   Asked whetherthis also included Bosnian Serbs, Joris replied that it did. Some were moving
 back and forth and did not have known whereabouts, or stable addressees in
 Bosnia or Yugoslavia, but many of them were living publicly, so there was
 not the problem of locating and tracking them.
 
   	Asked wherethe teams would come from and whether they would be armed, Joris replied that
 there were some ideas of how the idea could be implemented, however, this
 was subject to discussion and he could not comment further.
 
   	Asked whetherthey would come from the OTP or the UN, Joris replied that the idea would
 be under the responsibility of the Prosecutor, something along the lines of
 the tracking team in Rwanda, but obviously the situation was different so
 there would be a necessary cooperation and coordination with SFOR.
 
   	Asked whetherthese discussions had just taken place within the OTP or with others, Joris
 replied that discussions had taken place with NATO and the main participating
 states in SFOR.
 
   Asked how farthe OTP would depend on outside authorisation or consent to take some of the
 OTP investigators and put them on that specific task of locating fugitives,
 and whether there was a problem of the Tribunal’s mandate or to get the permission
 for them to walk around armed in Bosnia or a problem of cooperation, Joris
 replied that the idea was that the OTP did not have a judicial police and
 could not send armed people to perform the arrests themselves. The idea was
 not only to have an idealistic interest in knowing where the people were but
 in securing their arrests. He added that that was why a close coordination
 with SFOR would be important.
 
 While acceptingthe idea of a task force, was it not more a question of political will as
 to whether arrests took place and what did the Tribunal really gain from such
 a task force, Joris replied that there was political will to arrest fugitives
 and there were technical difficulties in locating them, this was the answer
 the Prosecutor had been receiving all along.
 
 
   Asked whetherit was time to abandon the idea of having these fugitives arrested, Joris
 said that the Tribunal was certainly not going to abandon the idea of having
 these fugitives arrested.
 
   Asked whetherthe Prosecutor would discuss the tracking team with the French, Joris replied
 that she would.
 
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