| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 
 
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date:
 22 November 2000
 
 Time:
 11:30 a.m.
 
 
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers made the following statement:
 
 
 PresidentClaude Jorda, the President of the Tribunal, has been at the United Nations
 Headquarters in New York for the past few days. On Monday, he formally presented
 the Tribunal’s Annual Report to the General Assembly and yesterday he addressed
 the Security Council. You should all have received copies of President Jorda’s
 speeches to the General Assembly and to the Security Council. In addition, we
 have copies of the Annual Report, which will be available to you after this.
 
 
 NextWednesday, 29 November, a diplomatic information seminar is being held here
 at the Tribunal for the diplomatic community here in The Hague and other representatives
 of UN Member States. The Ambassadors will be briefed by President Jorda, the
 Prosecutor and the Deputy Registrar, who will update the attendees on the challenges
 facing the Tribunal and will underline the fact that cooperation and support
 from all States is essential to fulfill the Tribunal’s mandate.
 
 
 Also,a three-day plenary session of the Judges of the Tribunal will begin next Wednesday
 afternoon. This is one of the regular twice-yearly plenaries held at the Tribunal,
 and will focus on the Tribunal’s Rules of Procedure and Evidence.
 
 
 Asfar as court documents are concerned, on 21 November 2000, we received a scheduling
 order from the Appeals Chamber in the Todorovic case, granting Todorovic’s motion
 for an extension of time. The Appeals Chamber ordered that the oral hearing
 will now take place on 10 January 2001 at 1000 hours, instead of 28 November
 as previously scheduled. Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands,
 Norway, the UK, the USA, NATO, the Prosecutor and the co-accused, may be heard
 at the hearing.
 
 
 TheAppeals Chamber also directed that Todorovic, Simic, Miroslav Tadic and Simo
 Zaric, may, by 15 December, respond to the written briefs filed by the states,
 NATO and the Prosecutor last Friday, 17 November.
 
 
 Therewill be a pre-trial conference in Sikirica and others case this afternoon at
 1430 hours. We have the pre-trial briefs for you on request. The Prosecutor’s
 was filed on 13 October, Damir Dosen’s on 3 November and Kolundzija’s on 10
 November. Sikirica’s pre-trial brief was filed confidentially. The pre-trial
 conference is scheduled for 22 November.
 
 
 Asyou may have heard announced during the Kordic and Cerkez hearing on Monday,
 rebuttal and rejoinder evidence are scheduled for the week ending 8 December.
 Written briefs are to be submitted by the 13 December. The closing arguments
 have been tentatively scheduled to take place on 14 and 15 December.
 
 
 Wereceived this morning a memorandum and brief from the Prosecutor in the Kordic
 and Cerkez case, in connection with the production of documentary evidence that
 has been collected since April in and around Zagreb in Croatia. This, I feel,
 will be of interest to you and so we have had copies made, which you can also
 pick up after this.
 
 
 Next,Naletilic and Martinovic have until 27 November 2000 to file their pre-trial
 briefs and the pre-trial conference is still scheduled for 7 December.
 
 
 Finally,the Registrar has granted a request from Stanislav Galic to have his counsel
 Mr. Nikola Kostich replaced by Ms. Mara Pilipovic, who is currently co-counsel
 for Dragoljub Kunarac.
 
   
 
 FlorenceHartmann, Spokesperson for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP), made the following
 statement:
 
 
 TheProsecutor and the Deputy Prosecutor were in Dayton last Friday and Saturday.
 They met with a number of people including some ex-Yugoslav leaders.
 
 
 MadameDel Ponte yesterday addressed the Security Council. You will receive copies
 of this address after the press briefing.
 
 
 Duringher address, the Prosecutor spoke about Rwanda and stressed that new indictments
 would be coming out before the end of the year. She added that there was a lot
 of activity there, for instance around the media, government and the military
 trials.
 
 
 TheProsecutor gave the figures of this year’s exhumations programme in Kosovo.
 These can be found in the address to be given out at the end of the briefing.
 The Prosecutor also explained that it would never be possible to provide an
 accurate figure of the number of people killed in Kosovo because of the deliberate
 attempt to burn bodies or to conceal them in other ways.
 
 
 Shewent on to say that the task of the Tribunal was not to give a complete figure
 of casualties. The Tribunal assisted in the identification process, for instance,
 58% exhumed this year were identified, but the OTP’s task is first of all to
 get evidence. We can say that over these two years of hard work we can now build
 up an excellent figure of the extent and pattern of crimes in Kosovo in 1999.
 
 
 Inher address the Prosecutor also stressed the lack of important cooperation from
 Croatia with the Tribunal and she asked for the support of the international
 community to bring Milosevic and other indictees, now living in Serbia, to The
 Hague. She also asked for a change to Article Five of the Statute. This Article
 links crimes against humanity with armed conflict, therefore she was asking
 of an extension to her jurisdiction in Kosovo after the armed conflict.
 
   
 
 QUESTIONS:
 
 
 
   	Askedfor the exact dates of the Plenary, Landale replied that they were Wednesday
 Thursday and Friday of next week, beginning in the afternoon of Wednesday
 29 November.
   	Asked formore information about the Prosecutor’s visit to Belgrade, Hartmann replied
 that the Prosecutor had applied for her visa and was planning to go to Belgrade,
 a date was not yet scheduled.
   	Asked whetherthe exhumation programme of the OTP in Kosovo was finished, Hartmann replied
 that it was. She added that after a two-year programme, the investigators
 had enough evidence for their investigation. She added that the task of the
 OTP was not to take a count of all of the victims. The OTP had now got enough
 evidence for what the OTP was working on. Hartmann added that this meant that
 part of the graves would not be exhumed by the OTP teams, however, out of
 941 potential sites reported by victims in Kosovo, 876 during this two-year
 programme had been found by the OTP.
   	Asked whatopportunities existed for visitors to see the detainees, Landale replied that
 the detention unit was housed within a Dutch prison a few kilometers from
 the Tribunal. There were opportunities for all those detained at the detention
 unit to receive visits. He added that priority was given to visits by defence
 counsel and families.
   	Asked whethercorrespondence was also allowed, Landale replied that it was.
   	Asked tocomment upon publications in the Bulgarian press that stated that the detainees
 were being kept in luxury conditions and that crimes were being rewarded rather
 that punished, Landale replied that the detention unit was run on the basis
 that it was not a prison, rather a remand centre.
 
 The people beingdetained there were either awaiting trial or were on trial, therefore they
 had yet to be given a final judgement by a Trial Chamber here at the Tribunal.
 This Tribunal ran on the assumption that all of our detainees were innocent
 until proven guilty, he added.
 
 If a personwas convicted of a crime and sentenced for a number of years, that person
 would serve their sentence in a third country that had an agreement with the
 United Nations. There were currently seven countries with such agreements
 with the United Nations.
 
 In additionto access to visitors, primarily legal counsel, families and embassy representatives,
 detainees were given ample opportunity to exercise and take various courses
 including languages and arts and crafts courses, which were quite popular.
 Detainees also had their own facilities to cook if they wished and received
 newspapers and TV programmes in their own languages.
 
 It could besaid that detainees were given more privileges than would be expected if they
 were serving sentences, he concluded.
 
 
   	Asked fora comment on reports that Serbian Interior Minister Tomovic had said that
 all indictess would enjoy police protection, Hartmann replied that if they
 were under police protection, maybe they would be under arrest in Serbia and
 it would be easier for the OTP to ask for their transferal. It was an obligation
 of Yugoslavia to cooperate with the Tribunal.
 
 Hartmann wenton to say that the office in Belgrade would soon be reopened and one of the
 tasks of the Prosecutor would be to ask the new authorities to transfer all
 fugitives living in Yugoslavia to The Hague, if they were under police protection
 it would be much easier for the OTP to ask the authorities to send them to
 the Tribunal.
 
 
   Asked whetherthe OTP had nothing against this police protection, Hartmann replied that
 the Prosecutor stated earlier that even if Milosevic was arrested in Serbia
 on other offences than the offences in the indictment she would agree with
 this because this would be a way to arrest him and to ask his transfer to
 The Hague.
 
 Landale addedthat it was ridiculous for the police to protect anyone indicted by the Tribunal
 when they had the clear obligation to detain them and transfer them without
 delay to The Hague.
 
   Asked whetherprotecting them would prevent escape, Landale replied that if this was protection
 aimed at effecting their safe and quick transfer to the Tribunal to face the
 charges contained in the indictments against them, then obviously this would
 be welcomed, but protection aimed at shielding them from international justice
 would be condemned by the Tribunal.
   	Asked whetherpolice protection was not to protect indictees from abduction, Landale replied
 that the best way to protect them from abduction was for the authorities to
 detain them and transfer them, as they were obliged to.
   	Asked whetherthe Tribunal had received any cooperation from other countries outside the
 former Yugoslavia in detaining and transferring indictees, Hartmann replied
 that the Prosecutor travelled to many countries around the former Yugoslavia
 and asked those countries, Bulgaria, Romania, Cyprus and others to cooperate
 and arrest fugitives if they crossed their borders.
   	Asked whetherany specific cooperation had been given, Hartmann replied that the example
 of freezing of assets of indictees in these countries could be given.
   	Asked whatchanges were requested to Article Five, Hartmann replied that it was an extension
 of the Prosecutor’s jurisdiction in Kosovo. In Article Five, crimes against
 humanity were linked with armed conflict, if this was changed and jurisdiction
 increased it would be possible to work on ethnic cleansing going on after
 the NATO troops entered Kosovo, she concluded.
   	Asked whetherthe changing of this Article dropped the precondition of armed conflict, Hartmann
 replied that it did as with the statute of the ICTR where no specification
 was in place. The Prosecutor was asking for both Statutes to be the same as
 it was important for Kosovo concerning ethnic cleansing after the entry of
 NATO troops.
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