| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date: 17 January 2001
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Christian Chartier, Chief of the Public Information Services, made the following
 statement:
 
 Thehearing on the Defence motion to modify the conditions of detention of Biljana
 Plavsic resumed at 10 a.m. today. This hearing, which began last Thursday in
 closed session, also continued in closed session.
 
 Itis now finished and the President is considering his decision. The Decision
 will be issued in writing before the end of the week.
 
 
 Iwould like to clarify a matter raised by some of you last week. The question
 was whether Mr. Krstan Simic can appear on behalf of Plavsic since he is also
 assigned to the accused Miroslav Kvocka.
 
 LastThursday, 11 January, the Registrar issued a Decision temporarily assigning
 Mr. Simic upon the request of Biljana Plavsic. In this Decision, the Registrar
 considered Article 16 (E) of the Directive on the Assignment of Defence Counsel:
 "No counsel shall be assigned to more than one suspect or accused at a
 time, unless an assignment to more than one suspect or accused would neither
 cause prejudice to the defence of either accused, nor a potential conflict of
 interest". The Registrar considered that no prejudice was caused to the
 defence of either accused and that at this time a conflict of interest did not
 appear to exist between the two accused. He thus assigned Mr. Simic as Counsel
 for Biljana Plavsic from 10 January until 24 January, without prejudice to the
 right of the accused to request permanent assignment of counsel.
 
 Oncourt proceedings matters:
 
     Thetrial of Radislav Krstic could not resume last Monday as previously
 scheduled. Trial Chamber I, presided over by Judge Rodrigues, adjourned
 the trial in light of a Defence Motion based upon a medical report stating
 that the accused was not fit to appear in court. According to the report,
 the accused’s health has deteriorated, he is experiencing pain and he required
 surgery. The Trial Chamber’s Order instructs the Registry to take all appropriate
 measures to facilitate a speedy resumption of the trial, and orders that
 a medical report on the psychological or physical state of health of the
 accused be submitted at least every seven days.
 
     Inthe case The Prosecutor against Momcilo Krajisnik, the status conference
 that was due to take place on Thursday 18 January has been postponed until
 Thursday 25 January at 10 a.m. This follows a Defence motion, not opposed
 by the Prosecution, based on the medical condition of the Defence Counsel.
 
     Twoother status conferences will take place on Friday: at 9.15 a.m. in the
 case The Prosecutor against Mitar Vasiljevic and at 10 a.m. in the
 case The Prosecutor against Kvocka and others.
 
     Alsoat 10 o’clock on Friday, the fully constituted Trial Chamber III will hold
 a hearing on Todorovic’s guilty plea. In order to enter this plea, the Trial
 Chamber has to be satisfied that the plea was made "voluntarily",
 was "informed", was "not equivocal" and that there is
 "a sufficient factual basis for the crime and the accused’s participation
 in it".
 
     Thetrial of Milorad Krnojelac, which reconvened this week, will continue
 next week. Also scheduled for next week is the resumption of the trial of
 Miroslav Kvocka, Mladen Radic, Milojica Kos, Zoran Zigic and Dragoljub Prcac.
 And a pre-trial conference is scheduled on Tuesday afternoon in the case
 The Prosecutor against Stanislav Galic.
 
 
 
 Ona more institutional note, the Security Counsel is now considering the nominees
 proposed by Member States to be elected as permanent Judges serving at the ICTY
 for the period 2001-2005. The Security Council is to prepare a short-list of
 candidates for election by the General Assembly. It is expected that this election
 will take place early March.
 
 MemberStates have also been invited to nominate candidates for the election of two
 additional Judges at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR).
 Once elected and sworn-in, these two Judges will replace the two ICTR Judges
 called upon to join The Hague as Judges of the Appeals Chambers for the ICTY
 and for the ICTR. We expect the Appeals Chamber, to be comprised of seven Judges
 as provided for in Resolution 1329, to be fully constituted in late May, early
 June.
 
 Andfinally, Member States will be invited early next month to nominate candidates
 for election as one of the 27 ad litem Judges. It is expected that this election
 will take place in June.
 
 
 Atthe end of this briefing, a number of important documents will be made available
 to you:
 
     theDirective on the assignment of Defence counsel, as revised on 15 December
 2000 (French and English)
 
     theamendments to the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, adopted by the Judges
 during the Plenary held on 13 December 2000 (English and French)
 
     theupdated Status of on-going cases prepared by the Public Information Services.
 
 
 Thesedocuments are already available on the ICTY’s internet page
 
   
 
 OFFICE OF THEPROSECUTOR
 
 Florence Hartmann, Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor made the following
 statement:
 
 
 The Prosecutorwas in Zagreb on Monday. She will have a working visit to Belgrade next week.
 
   
 QUESTIONS:
 
   Asked for clarificationon reports made last week that the Government of Croatia had stated that the
 Tudjman tapes would not be made public and whether they differentiated between
 the public and the Tribunal, Florence Hartmann replied that the Prosecutor
 had raised this issue with the Government of Croatia. She added that the Prosecutor
 received confirmation during the meeting in Zagreb on Monday that the decision
 from Croatia not to make the tapes public did not effect its international
 obligations to the ICTY. She added that the OTP would receive the tapes or
 the archives requested. Everything was clarified and cooperation was back
 on track, she concluded.
   Asked whetherthe Prosecutor would meet with President Kostunica during her visit to Belgrade
 next week, Florence Hartmann replied that the visit to Belgrade was a working
 visit. She added that after the elections in Yugoslavia, the new authorities
 had expressed their wish to cooperate with the ICTY. She went on to say that
 the priority of this visit was to establish cooperation from Yugoslavia. The
 Prosecutor would have a number of meetings with Ministers and members of the
 Federal Government and would also meet with the next Prime Minister of Serbia.
 She added thatthe Prosecutor was willing to meet with Mr. Kostunica as a dialogue was necessary.
 There was great interest in the ICTY in Yugoslavia and a lot of questions
 about the ICTY to be answered. The Prosecutor hoped for direct dialogue with
 President Kostunica in order to answer all of his questions.
 
 The Prosecutorstill anticipated a possible meeting with Mr. Kostunica, however, it was not
 a priority. She would be happy to have this meeting and there was a possibility
 because the visit would last three days,. If not, hopefully next time.
 
 
   Asked for clarificationof an article yesterday which stated that the Prosecutor was willing to hand
 over sealed indictments to President Kostunica, Florence Hartmann replied
 that the Prosecutor would give requests or indictments to the Yugoslav authorities.
 She would do this even if she did not meet with Mr. Kostunica.
 One of the cooperationissues between Yugoslavia and the ICTY was the arrest and transfer of all
 fugitives. The Prosecutor would remind them of their obligations to arrest
 and transfer indictees on the public list. She would also deliver warrants
 relating to the sealed indictments.
 
 Florence Hartmannadded that the Prosecutor would not give the sealed indictments, but warrants
 for indictees the ICTY knew were living in the territories of FRY. She concluded
 that this was being done as a sign of confidence and a way of supporting a
 quick start to cooperation from Yugoslavia.
 
 
   Asked why theOTP, for the first time, was showing this trust in Yugoslavia when Yugoslavia
 had never expressed even verbally that they would arrest people indicted by
 the Tribunal, Florence Hartmann replied that it was not the first time this
 had been done with some local authorities, there was also the Lukic case.
 
 Christian Chartierrepeated that this was nothing new. What was new at the time of the Lukic
 case was that this information was made public. He added that the philosophy
 behind sealed indictments was that they were issued by the Prosecutor and
 confirmed by a Judge but not made known to the public at large or to the media.
 He went on to say that this did not mean that these indictments were just
 sheets of paper placed in a safe. These indictments or related warrants were
 transmitted to those authorities the Prosecutor believed could act upon them,
 be it SFOR forces, or national authorities. He concluded that there was no
 point to sealed indictments if were not forwarded to at least one authority
 to act upon.
 
   Asked why theindictments were being given to authorities who were not even willing to cooperate
 on public indictments, Florence Hartmann replied that the Tribunal wanted
 the arrest of all fugitives even those on sealed indictments. If nobody knew
 about them there was no chance to arrest them. The OTP had to receive cooperation
 from the people who could realise the arrests. In this case the Tribunal was
 giving the Yugoslav authorities the same chance as that given in the Lukic
 case to the government in Banja Luka. The OTP would then see if the promise
 of cooperation from Yugoslavia would produce concrete results, she concluded.
   Asked for moreinformation concerning Krstic’s surgery, Christian Chartier replied that he
 was not authorised to comment on a private medical report. He confirmed that
 the accused required some medical assistance, however, the nature of it, the
 extent of it and the timing of it was not to be disclosed. It was a private
 matter, he concluded.
   Asked for furtherclarification of an interview with the Prosecutor last weekend in which she
 was reported to have said that there would be a study or investigation made
 into the use of depleted Uranium ammunitions, Florence Hartmann replied that
 the position of the Prosecutor was that depleted uranium was not a forbidden
 weapon. It was not forbidden by any International law or convention and was
 not under the mandate of the Tribunal.
 
 If the investigationsgoing on in some countries disclosed certain elements that the OTP did not
 have before that showed that there had been a violation of an article or some
 international convention under the OTP mandate, then the OTP would have to
 reconsider its position and if it was under the OTPs mandate it could open
 investigations.
 
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