| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date: 7 March 2001
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 
 First,I have copies for you of the speech given yesterday by Mr. Hans Holthuis, the
 Registrar of the Tribunal, to the Plenary of the Preparatory Commission of the
 International Criminal Court (ICC) during its seventh session in New York.
 
 On23 March, there will be a diplomatic information seminar here at the Tribunal
 at the working level focusing on the issue of ad litem judges, and specifically
 their importance to the mission, their conditions and terms of service, and
 their actual employment. The seminar will not be open to the public.
 
 HisExcellency Mohamed El Habib Fassi Fihri from Morocco has arrived in The Netherlands
 to replace Judge Mohamed Bennouna. Mr. El Habib Fassi Fihri is expected to be
 sworn in as a Judge of the International Tribunal on 14 March.
 
 Thismorning we received notices of appeal from Dragoljub Kunarac, Radomir Kovac
 and Zoran Vukovic against their convictions handed down by Trial Chamber II
 on 22 February 2001. All three defendants cite "an error of the question
 of law invalidating the decision" and "error of fact which
 has occasioned the miscarriage of justice". The deadline for filing
 notices of appeal is this Friday. Copies of these will be available after the
 briefing.
 
 On1 March 2001, we received the Prosecutions Submission of New Public Schedules
 in the Kvocka and others case. Again copies will be made available on request.
 
 Also,I would like to mention a symposium focussing on the work of the Tribunal held
 last week in Prishtina. The event, attended by around 200 participants, was
 organised by the Prishtina-based Council for the Defence of Human Rights and
 Freedoms (CDHRF) and was funded by the Danish Foreign Affairs Ministry. Several
 ICTY representatives took part in the symposium, which was most positive with
 plenty of interesting discussion.
 
   
 OFFICEOF THE PROSECUTOR
 
 Florence Hartmann, Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor, made no statement.
 
   
 QUESTIONS: 
 
   Asked whetherthe Prosecutor had any views on the events in Kosovo and Macedonia, Hartmann
 replied that the OTP was following the events there very closely and that
 it appeared that there were organised parties in both conflicts. Therefore,
 on the basis of the Tribunal’s mandate, it triggered our jurisdiction. She
 emphasised that the ICTY’s jurisdiction was over crimes against humanity,
 war crimes and genocide, in an armed conflict. So far there was no evidence
 that there were such crimes being committed, but there was an armed conflict
 and the OTP had jurisdiction and were closely looking at developments, she
 concluded.
 
   Asked if therewas any knowledge of the Prosecutor’s request to the Security Council to exclude
 armed conflict from the Tribunal’s mandate, Hartmann replied that there was
 no information on that, but it would be discussed during the visit of the
 Prosecutor to the Security Council in May. She added that this would be one
 of the issues discussed, the other issue would be the question of the cooperation
 of Yugoslavia with the Tribunal and of ex-Yugoslav states with the Tribunal.
 
 Landale addedthat it was important for any commander on the ground or person in a superior
 command responsibility position to think very long and hard before they undertook
 any action that could possibly put them under the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.
 
 
   Asked whetherthere were any signs of Belgrade’s cooperation with the Tribunal, Hartmann
 replied that for the moment there were no clear signs, however she added that
 the Prosecutor had asked for clear signs before the end of the month.
 
   Asked aboutthe announcements in the Belgrade media that government representatives would
 meet with President Jorda, Landale replied that he was aware of the reports
 in the media, however the Tribunal was not aware of an actual approach made
 to the Office of the President. He added that, if there was an intention to
 visit and discuss various issues on cooperation between the Tribunal and authorities
 in Belgrade, the President would be willing to accommodate such a visit. However,
 nothing formal has been heard from Belgrade’s side, he added.
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