| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 
 
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date:
 6 September 2000
 
 Time:
 13:00 p.m.
 
 
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Christian
 Chartier, Head of the Public Information Services made the following statement:
 
 
 Iwould firstly like to draw your attention to the fact that, as of next week,
 the proceedings will again be in full swing. The Kordic and Cerkez trial and
 the Kvocka and others trial will continue and the trial of Kunarac, Kovac and
 Vukovic (the Foca case) will resume.
 
 
 Secondly,following questions by some of you this morning, I would like to confirm that
 the Trial Chamber sitting on the Kordic and Cerkez trial has indeed issued a
 subpoena to General Petkovic to appear as a witness. The subpoena is a confidential
 order, so I cannot elaborate any further. It is not the first time that a Chamber
 has issued such a subpoena. In 1999 the Trial Chamber sitting on the Blaskic
 case summoned six witnesses; at that time the Chamber’s Order was based upon
 Rule 98 of the RPP, providing that "a Trial Chamber may order either party
 to produce additional evidence. It may proprio motu summon witnesses
 and order their attendance". I am not saying this is the case in Kordic
 and Cerkez, I am using this as a background example.
 
 
 Finally,two announcements concerning the Outreach Programme.
 
 
 Courtesyof the Outreach Programme, two important documents released before the summer
 have now been translated in BCS. Namely the Judges Report on the operation of
 the ICTY and the Report to the Prosecutor by the Committee established to review
 the NATO bombing campaign against the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Those
 two translations are available on hard copies from the Outreach Programme but
 they are also being filed on the BCS page of the Tribunal’s website.
 
 
 Lastweekend the Outreach Programme held in association with the Croatian Helsinki
 Committee a two-day symposium entitled "ICTY and Victims of War".
 This symposium was held in Zagreb and brought together Tribunal’s representatives
 with Croatian legal professionals, NGO’s and victim-support groups to discuss
 the role of witnesses and victims in the work of the ICTY. The symposium was
 sponsored by the Peace and Stability Fund of the Danish Ministry of Foreign
 Affairs. It was a most timely and interesting meeting on which the Outreach
 Programme will be happy to provide those interested with further information.
 
   
 
 
 OFFICEOF THE PROSECUTOR
 
 Paul Risley, Spokesman for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP) made the following
 announcement:
 
 
 
 	TheProsecutor is in the second day of her trip through Romania and Bulgaria.
 
   
 
 QUESTIONS: 
     	Askedwhether the arrests of Ante Sliskovic and Tomo Vlajic reported on Croatian
 State television were made at the request of the Tribunal, Paul Risley replied
 that he had no comment on the two arrests. He added, however, that if the
 OTP intended to make a statement he would issue it in due course.
     	Askedwhether the subpoena issued to General Petkovic to appear as a witness in
 the Kordic and Cerkez trial was to be made public, Christian Chartier replied
 that the Chamber had issued the document on a confidential basis for good
 legal reasons and any announcement of the documents being made public was
 not expected.
     Asked formore information on the visits by the Prosecutor to Bulgaria and Romania,
 Paul Risley replied that the visits to both the countries was in line with
 earlier visits to countries surrounding the former Yugoslavia. He added
 that the Prosecutor was expected to meet with the Defence and Justice Ministers
 and Prime Ministers in both countries. He concluded by adding that he expected
 the chief topic of the discussions would be cooperation by those States
 with the Prosecutor and with the Tribunal in general.
     Asked whetherany of the documents requested in a court order issued by the trial chamber
 in the Kordic and Cerkez case from the Netherlands and 11 other European
 Union states had been received by the Registry, Christian Chartier replied
 that this order was issued one month ago with a deadline of 30 September.
 Until that date had passed he was not in a position to say whether documents
 had begun to arrive. It was too early in the process to say, he concluded.
     Asked whetherthe Prosecutor had requested that NATO set up a special unit with the purpose
 of arresting indicted war criminals, Paul Risley replied that the Prosecutor
 had made calls for the formation of such a unit in the past. He added that
 the Prosecutor had publicly made mention of such an idea when she addressed
 the North Atlantic Council in Brussels in February. The idea was to create
 a more or less permanent unit contributed to by the NATO military forces
 that would act to bring about the apprehension of persons wanted by the
 Tribunal. He concluded that it could presumably coordinate the work of national
 governments outside the former Yugoslavia.
 *****
   
 |