| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date: 4 April 2001
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Christian Chartier, Head of Public Information Services, made the following
 statement:
 
 
 Goodmorning to you all, I am joined today by Mr. Stephane Bourgon, Chef de Cabinet
 of the President, and by Mr. Jean-Jacques Joris, Diplomatic Adviser to the Prosecutor.
 
 
 Aspart of the ongoing efforts for full cooperation between the International Criminal
 Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
 (FRY), the Registrar of the Tribunal, Mr. Hans Holthuis, has been mandated by
 the President of the Tribunal, Judge Claude Jorda, and the Prosecutor, Carla
 Del Ponte, to travel to Belgrade to discuss practical modalities in connection
 with the FRY’s legal obligations, under the Statute of the Tribunal.
 
 
 Tothis end, the Registrar, who is leaving today will have a series of legal meetings
 with, among others, the Federal Minister of Justice, Mr. Momcilo Grubac, the
 Serbian Minister of Justice Mr. Vladan Batic, and, it is anticipated, the Serbian
 Interior Minister, Mr. Dusan Mihajlovic.
 
 
 Mr.Holthuis is travelling in his neutral capacity as Registrar to clarify to the
 authorities in Belgrade the steps that have to be taken to fulfil their legal
 obligations set out in the Tribunal’s Rules of Procedure and Evidence, so that
 the authorities are clear on the course of future cooperation with the Tribunal.
 
 
 Mr.Holthuis will also hand over the Tribunal’s arrest warrant for Slobodan Milosevic
 to ensure that it is served on the accused. In addition, the Registrar will
 be seeking information on the nature of the charges being brought against Slobodan
 Milosevic in the district court in Belgrade, so as to be able to evaluate the
 possible connection between the charges and the Tribunal’s indictment.
 
   
 
 StephaneBourgon, Chef de Cabinet of the President, made the following statement:
 
 
 	Onbehalf of the President of the Tribunal I would like to make a very short statement
 concerning the follow up to the arrest of Mr. Milosevic in Belgrade. This statement
 is simply that Mr. Milosevic like all other persons indicted who are arrested
 by a member of the UN must be transferred to the Tribunal. This is the Tribunal’s
 position. That being said, the President is of the view that the situation in
 this case has a special character. This special character has nothing to do
 with Mr. Milosevic himself or the fact that he was the head of state before.
 The special character in this case is simply that the FRY wishes to prosecute
 him for common law crimes. This is what the Tribunal needs to address now.
 
   
 
 OFFICEOF THE PROSECUTOR
 
 Jean-Jacques Joris, Advisor to the Prosecutor no statement.
 
 
   
 QUESTIONS: 
 
     	Askedwhat ‘special character’ meant for the Tribunal, Jean-Jacques Joris replied
 that the Prosecutor’s emphasis had always been on the transfer of Mr. Milosevic
 to The Hague. He added that his arrest made this transfer possible. Transfer
 was the result of an international obligation Yugoslavia had to comply with.
 This obligation was not negotiable, in the case of Mr. Milosevic or anyone
 else, regardless of rank or citizenship. Mr. Milosevic’s position as far
 as the OTP was concerned was not affected by any ongoing national proceedings.
 That being said, the Prosecutor had no objection to local charges being
 raised against Mr. Milosevic and it was with the full agreement of the OTP
 that once Mr. Milosevic was transferred to The Hague, it would be possible
 for the Serbian judicial investigating authorities to continue their investigations
 and interviews of Mr. Milosevic while in custody in The Hague, he concluded.
 
     	Askedto clarify this statement as it was different to what was said yesterday
 to Reuters, Jean-Jacques Joris repeated that the emphasis of the Prosecutor
 had always been on the absolute, non-negotiable obligation of Yugoslavia
 to comply with Mr. Milosevic’s transfer to The Hague.
 
   StephaneBourgon added that the President and the Prosecutor were of the same view,
 which was that the obligation rested on the authorities of the FRY to transfer
 Mr. Milosevic at the earliest possible opportunity. That being said, in this
 case a sovereign state had filed common law charges against one of its own
 citizens and the FRY could not be prohibited from doing so. Now the Tribunal
 had to assess the situation to ascertain when and how the authorities of the
 FRY would respect their legal obligations to transfer Mr. Milosevic at the
 earliest possible opportunity.
     	Askedwhether the fact that the OTP had carried out extensive investigations to
 find Mr. Milosevic’s assets in foreign bank accounts (and that according
 to an article the Prosecutor was prepared to give information on this to
 the Yugoslav authorities to assist them in their domestic proceedings) would
 affect the date of Mr. Milosevic’s transfer to The Hague, Jean Jacques Joris
 replied that it would have no bearing on the date of the transfer of Mr.
 Milosevic, as the investigations by the Serbian authorities could go on
 when Mr. Milosevic was in custody at the Tribunal. As for cooperation with
 Belgrade on the financial investigation, this was already made clear about
 ten days ago at the Press conference after the visit of Ministers Grubac
 and Batic. The Prosecutor was ready to assist the Yugoslav authorities in
 those investigations. The OTP had valuable information for them. This underlined
 that cooperation was not only a legal obligation for Yugoslavia but could
 also be beneficial for Yugoslavia, he concluded.
 
     	Askedto clarify the apparent contradiction between a statement he made yesterday
 in which he said that immediate commitment was needed from Yugoslavia, even
 if the transfer could take some time and today’s statement that the transfer
 had to be as soon as possible, Jean-Jacques Joris replied that the emphasis
 had always been on the absolute legal obligation of the FRY. It might have
 been thought that over the last two or three days the OTP had adopted a
 line that was a little less prominent. The arrest of Milosevic had provoked
 no upheavals in Yugoslavia the situation was firmly in hand there was no
 reason why the OTP should not make its position very clear that Milosevic
 should be transferred to The Hague immediately.
 
     	Askedwhether he was worried by the recent declaration from the Serbian authorities
 that they had no commitment to the transfer of Mr. Milosevic, Jean-Jacques
 Joris replied that the OTP was not worried, and were aware of the statements
 made by several individuals and high authorities in Yugoslavia. The arguments
 of a national law on cooperation had a different meaning for the OTP. Yugoslavia
 might feel it had the need for a law to organise the technicalities of cooperation.
 The OTP’s position to that was regardless of whether there was a law, the
 absence or imperfections of such a law should not in any case justify lack
 of cooperation or imperfect cooperation. The obligation of Yugoslavia to
 cooperate was non-negotiable. If Yugoslavia chose to have a law it was to
 make it easier for internal proceedings but that was of no direct concern
 to the Tribunal.
 
     	Askedwhether the OTP was worried about the reaction of the international community,
 Javier Solana for example, advising them not to put any pressure on Yugoslavia
 to transfer Milosevic, Jean-Jacques Joris replied that the OTP had observed
 a very consistent line in the international community which was that Milosevic
 must be transferred to The Hague. There might be variations in emphasis
 or in the tone being used but the bottom line was that Yugoslavia must comply
 and that Yugoslavia must transfer Mr. Milosevic, there was no inconsistency
 on that point, he concluded.
   StephaneBourgon added that the Tribunal’s legal position concerning a law on cooperation
 was that such a law was not absolutely necessary for Mr. Milosevic to be transferred
 to the Tribunal and this was simply on the basis that international obligations
 of a state had primacy over national legislation or over any other extradition
 treaties which they may try to invoke. This was also recognised in the Rules
 of Procedure and Evidence, Rule 58. The Tribunal had said through the voice
 of the President, in the past that for the sake of the application of the
 rule of law within the FRY that may be the adoption of a law on cooperation
 could be positive for both the Tribunal and the FRY. This was why the Tribunal
 insisted on being kept informed of the progress of the adoption of the law.
 
     	Askedwhether the Registrar was going to Belgrade to hand over the arrest warrant
 that the Prosecutor had already handed over in January, Christian Chartier
 confirmed that was correct and that the Registrar would hand them over again.
 He said that the documents were exactly the same, however the Tribunal would
 take them once again to make sure that the Yugoslav authorities were familiar
 with the documents. He also said that Mr. Holthuis would request that the
 documents be served on the accused.
   StephaneBourgon added that on 23 January those documents were given to the authorities
 of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. At that time Mr. Milosevic was not
 in custody. Now he was in custody, the Registrar would fulfill his role as
 was indicated in the Tribunal’s Rules of Procedure and Evidence, he would
 travel to Belgrade and ask the authorities to give the arrest warrant and
 indictment to the accused in custody regardless of the special circumstances.
 
     	Askedwhether Mr. Milosevic could be transferred to The Hague without the cooperation
 of Mr. Kostunica, Jean-Jacques Joris replied that this was not for him to
 answer. The state of the FRY was a subject of international law and had
 an obligation to comply. Whether it was Mr. Kostunica, the police or the
 Minister of Justice was not of their concern.
 
     	Askedwhether, practically speaking, it would be possible and whether it was a
 threat to his transfer, Jean-Jacques Joris replied that he did not believe
 that it was a threat. Mr. Kostunica was a lawyer of constitutional law and
 was very aware of the implications of international obligations as well
 as the constitutional subtleties so the OTP had no doubt that Mr. Kostunica
 would soon understand what it meant to comply with his international obligations.
 
     	Askedwhether, the fact that Mr. Milosevic for the first time had admitted funding
 money and arms to parties in Bosnia and Croatia had any implications on
 the indictment against him, Jean-Jacques Joris replied that the Prosecutor
 had announced several times that the OTP had investigations going on the
 implication of Milosevic in Bosnia and Croatia. These indictments should
 be ready any time between the next few weeks or before the summer break.
 Investigations which were the basis of an indictment were extremely in-depth
 and thorough and the indictment must prove beyond all reasonable doubt the
 responsibility of the indicted person. This was one element among others
 to be considered, he concluded.
 
   StephaneBourgon added that this was a very important issue as the President was of
 the opinion that the Tribunal could not ignore the fact that the FRY or the
 Serb authorities may wish to lay charges against Milosevic. For the Tribunal
 to consider these charges, however, they had to be different and fall outside
 the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, but if the charges laid by the authorities
 in Yugoslavia fell in any way within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, the
 Tribunal had primacy jurisdiction over the national authorities. In such a
 case it would make the transfer of Mr. Milosevic to the Tribunal that much
 more important and that much more the issue in this case.
 
     Asked aboutinstruments within the Tribunal to cover a request for deferral, Stephane
 Bourgon replied that Article 9 of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence was
 drafted widely and covered a variety of circumstances for which the Prosecutor
 could ask the President to appoint a Chamber and address a request for deferral.
 If the Prosecutor did make such a request then the President would be obliged
 to appoint a Chamber which would look at the arguments brought forward by
 both parties. In this respect it would be a judicial debate, and not a political
 one. He added that it would be held in a chamber of the Tribunal and there
 would be an assessment about exactly what the authorities of the FRY were
 trying to do with respect to Mr. Milosevic, within the scope of Article
 9. The Chamber may decide that the Tribunal had primacy and would then order
 FRY to immediately transfer Mr. Milosevic to The Hague. He added that this
 would not be very different to the current situation, only that it would
 add more pressure. The Tribunal needed to understand what the authorities
 in FRY planned in the end, to do, which was part of the mission of the Registrar
 during his visit to Belgrade.
 
     Asked howthe Tribunal could enforce and ensure that FRY actually transferred Mr.
 Milosevic, Jean-Jacques Joris replied that the Tribunal would use the same
 means and procedures that had been used in the past. He added, that the
 Prosecutor would be travelling to New York in May where she would appear
 in front of the Security Council which will provide and excellent opportunity
 in which to asses the cooperation with FRY.
 
     Asked ifthe Prosecution line had changed in regards to the urgency of Milosevic
 being transferred to the Hague, Jean Jacques Joris replied that the situation
 had changed dramatically, with Milosevic in jail and that there were no
 impediments to the Prosecution stating, once again, that the transfer of
 Milosevic was non-negotiable and must occur immediately.
 
   StephaneBourgon added, that the Tribunal had never changed its position on the transfer
 of Mr. Milosevic, however, since his arrest the Tribunal insisted on this
 even more. He added, however, that the Tribunal could not ignore the fact
 that FRY was trying to lay charges against him.
 ***** 
 |