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 Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 10 May 2000
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers made the following statement:
 
 
 In the Talic andBrdjanin case, the Defence for General Momir Talic has filed a motion in French
 requesting that Judge Mumba be withdrawn from sitting on the trial due to the
 fact that she has already ruled on the issue of "international armed conflict"
 in the Tadic appeal.
 
 
 Also, we havejust received some sworn ‘supporting statements’ from the Defence for Dario
 Kordic, which were taken from defence witnesses in Bosnia in front of an investigative
 judge in the municipal court in Vitez. These are witnesses whose testimony has
 been requested by the defence team to support Kordic’s case.
 
 
   
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 Paul Risley, Spokesman for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) made the following
 statement:
 
 
 	The Prosecutoris in Kigali today. She was in Arusha before this and will likely return to
 Arusha by the end of the week, where she will remain for another week.
 
 
 I was in Kosovolast week and I can give you an update of the work of the exhumations there.
 The Tribunal morgue is in operation, located outside Orahovac. It is a central
 facility where bodies can be taken from all sites in Kosovo.
 
 
 This is a markedimprovement on last year when most autopsies were done on-site. Now the teams
 have the ability to remove bodies from the field and take them to a very professional
 morgue, built and equipped to the highest European standards, including an x-ray
 machine.
 
 
 	Just as importantas the establishment of the morgue, UNMIK has created a Victims Recovery &
 Identification Commission (VRIC). This is made up of personnel from UNMIK, the
 Tribunal, the OSCE and a local NGO. They will take over the primary duty of
 the identification of remains. This was work that the Tribunal was doing last
 summer. It is a very time consuming process. Now, the VRIC will take over the
 role of contacting local villagers from where we know the victims came and identifying
 distinctive articles of clothing and jewelry, anything for recognition or appearance
 that the Tribunal can use for identification. Identification is very important
 to the Tribunal because it creates the link between where a murder may have
 occurred and who the perpetrators may have been.
 
 
 	At the morguethere are offices for the VRIC staffed by 15 people. They were engaged in training
 sessions with local employees who will work with the VRIC to assist in the identification
 of victims.
 
 
 	The site thatthe Tribunal’s forensics team was working on last week was in Djakova. I believe
 that they will finish up there this week. This site is in the city cemetery,
 which is located on the western outskirts of Djakova. In there are somewhere
 between 40 and 80 bodies which were buried during the period of conflict last
 year. The locations of the burials are evident and obvious. The bodies will
 be exhumed from those sites, autopsies will be done as well as identification
 as most of these bodies were buried without any form of identification other
 that a date of the presumed death when they were buried.
 
 
 	At the othersite near the cemetery it is alleged that bodies were dumped in a ravine. We
 are attempting, without success so far, to determine whether bodies were dumped
 there. At the Djakova site there is a Tribunal forensic team, operating, similarly
 to the teams in Croatia and Bosnia. This is a full-time 15 person Tribunal team
 operating in Kosovo, in addition to that team, there is a British team working
 in Kosovo, there is a Swedish team due to start in the next week and there are
 Canadian personnel present in Pristina and more will follow shortly.
 
 
 	In Croatia,the Tribunal forensic team recently completed its work at Gospic and it is my
 understanding that they are now moving to Bosnia to look at sites there. When
 we locate other sites of interest in Croatia this team will transfer back to
 continue its work there. In Gospic at least 10 bodies were located in a very
 difficult site which was essentially a concrete septic tank over which both
 soil and concrete had been placed and then a building had been demolished nearby
 causing a pile of rubble. Without the very precise information and detailed
 location that the investigators had, the team would certainly not have found
 the gravesite. The attempts to find other gravesites not far from Gospic have
 so far proven unsuccessful, but our investigators will continue to test possible
 gravesites in that area, as well as other locations. Once one is found the Tribunal
 intends to bring the whole forensics team of 15 persons back to the Croatian
 site.
 
   
  QUESTIONS:
 
   	Askedwhether there were any indications that the 10 bodies found in the Gospic
 gravesite were those of Serb civilians, Risley replied that the most important
 part of the Tribunal’s work in Gospic remained to be done, this being the
 proper identification of these remains. He added that these bodies were now
 at a morgue in Zagreb, where the identification process was being undertaken
 by both the Tribunal, as well as university forensics experts. He concluded
 that that procedure would take several weeks and when and if any conclusions
 were drawn, he would hopefully be able to give an update.
 
 He went on tosay that there were published reports of Serb civilians as well as Croatian
 civilians, perhaps killed by the same perpetrators in Gospic. It remained
 the task of the OTP to link these bodies with any specific eye witness accounts
 of what occurred there. He added that it was important to keep in mind that
 there was a period of conflict within Croatia that spread across many different
 parts of the country and these bodies had been in the ground for at least
 eight years.
 
    	Askedto elaborate on the difficulty of finding these sites and the team knowing
 exactly where to look, Risley replied that the team relied on eyewitness accounts
 and other information. He noted that there had been published reports in the
 Croatian media giving the names and faces of persons reportedly believed to
 have talked to the Tribunal. He concluded that the way in which the location
 was found indicated that the Tribunal had received very good information.
   	Asked whetherthese 10 bodies were the only bodies recovered in Croatia during the last
 period of time that the Tribunal team was in the country, Risley replied that
 it was.
 
 The OTP greatlyappreciated the cooperation of the Croatian government in the work completed
 in Gospic and would not have occurred six months ago, he concluded.
 
 
   Asked whethernames were contained in the Kordic documents, Landale replied that there were
 about seven names, and that they were all from Vitez. Each one was a witness
 with a name and a supporting statement to the Kordic case. They were about
 one page long, he added.
   	Asked forfurther information on the President’s visit to Croatia, Landale replied that
 he was yet to receive a full readout on the meeting with President Mesic.
 He added that President Jorda was currently meeting with the Ministers of
 Justice, Foreign Affairs and Deputy Prime Minister Granic in Zagreb. He hoped
 to have a full readout on those meetings during the course of the day.
 
 	He wenton to say that President Jorda gave a keynote address at the International
 Symposium in Opatija yesterday. This was during the second day of the symposium,
 which had been devoted entirely to the Tribunal, which was something that
 the Tribunal welcomed as a very positive initiative. He added that according
 to the information he had received, all the discussions were very positive
 and constructive and hopefully signaled a new chapter in the relationship
 between Croatia and the Tribunal. On top of other indicators received over
 the past months since the new administration arrived, the Tribunal felt quite
 optimistic about the relationship between the Tribunal and the new Croatian
 administration, he concluded.
 
 
   	Asked howthe Tribunal expected to complete exhumation of 300 sites in Kosovo this year,
 Risley replied that the OTP had a very ambitious challenge of attempting to
 clear 300 separate sites of reported graves within Kosovo.
 
 The OTP expectedthat further international teams would come to work in Kosovo. He added that
 rough promises were made by about seven teams so far. Last year the OTP had
 a maximum of 14 teams. It was more difficult this year to gain international
 attention to the work of the Tribunal in Kosovo and thus more difficult to
 get the same countries to provide forensic teams, personnel and skills which
 certainly would be necessary in order to cover 300 hundred separate sites.
 In the OTP’s favour this year, is the establishment of the morgue, which allowed
 sites to be cleared quicker. The morgue was quite large and could handle bodies
 from four different teams at the same time. Considering that last year the
 OTP did not start work until the end of July the season this year was much
 longer. Therefore although ambitious, it was possible, he concluded.
 
 
   	Asked whetherthere would be other ongoing Tribunal continued activities in Kosovo this
 year, Risley replied that the OTP investigations continued within Kosovo.
 The Prosecutor has publicly said even during her visit to Kosovo last October
 that the OTP was investigating both Milosevic for crimes committed in Kosovo
 as well as the KLA for crimes committed against Serb civilians in 1998 and
 1999.
   	Asked forinformation on the Prosecutor’s visa request for Belgrade, Risley replied
 that, despite a news article the other day that said that the Prosecutor’s
 application had been rejected, the OTP had received no communication from
 the Belgrade authorities so far.
   Asked whetherthe OTP believed it would be possible to complete the work with just the seven
 teams this year, Risley replied that it was the goal for the OTP to complete
 the work this summer. He added however, that experience showed in Bosnia and
 Croatia the OTP could return to certain sites next summer or even years later.
 The evidence remained with the bodies and as long as they were sufficiently
 buried this could be done.
   Asked whetherthere was an assessment made by the OTP as to whether this could actually
 be done, Risley replied that under the number of teams the OTP would be able
 to field, which may be more than seven, from now until September, the OTP
 believed that although it was an ambitious schedule it could be completed.
 The difficult part of making any estimation was arriving at any site and finding
 more bodies or a more difficult site than anticipated and it took much longer.
 With the use of the morgue, this process was speeded up as it made the work
 of the teams in the field more specific.
   Asked aboutthe deadline for the turning over of documents in the Todorovic case, Landale
 replied that, according to the information he had so far, the deadline was
 ‘as soon as reasonably possible’. He added that since then there had been
 a motion filed on behalf of the defence seeking clarification as to whether
 there was a deadline and exactly what the situation was. He added that further
 verification from the Trial Chamber as to what they expected to be done and
 in what time frame had been requested.
   Asked whathe anticipated the response from the OTP to be, Risley replied that he would
 inquire with the Deputy Prosecutor.
 
 He added thatthere were some difficulties in the Omarska case yesterday. The Deputy Prosecutor
 made it clear this morning that he regretted that the Prosecution team had
 failed to make available specific witness documents and testimonies in the
 discovery process and that that was regrettable, causing a week to be lost
 in terms of presenting the Prosecutor’s case.
 
 
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