| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date: 16 December 1998
 
 Time: 11:30 a.m.
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, theICTY Spokesman, began todays briefing by pointing out that press releases
 were available on the Presidents speech to the Peace Implementation Council
 meeting in Madrid yesterday, the deferral request and on the fine imposed on
 Mr Nobilo for contempt of court.
 He also remindedjournalists that this was the last week of court hearings until 8 January, and
 that the next press briefing would be on 6 January.
 
   
 The Prosecutor,Justice Louise Arbour, then made the following remarks:
 
 On the deferralhearing, she confirmed that the court had granted the order. The hearing in
 Belgrade was still scheduled to go ahead despite this order. The invitation
 letter received by Justice Arbour had invited ICTY officials to attend and visas
 had been applied for and were granted, although they had been informed orally
 that they could not go to Kosovo during their stay. In turn, the Office of the
 Prosecutor (OTP) had orally requested that, should Mrksic, Radic and Sljivancanin
 appear, they should be detained and transferred to The Hague. This request would
 be conveyed again at the hearing on Thursday, she said adding that arrest warrants
 for the three had been re-served. The Tribunal court order gave 60 days for
 the Belgrade military court to comply. If they did not then the President would
 be requested to bring the matter to the attention of the Security Council, she
 said.
 
 Justice Arbourthen went on to give a briefing about the visit to the Tribunal of the Minister
 of Justice for the Federal Republic Yugoslavia (FRY) on Thursday. Justice Arbour
 said that the meeting would discuss several matters including practical assistance.
 The Minister would also meet the President and the Registrar, she said.
 
 Whilst in Madrid,Justice Arbour, met the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Ivanov. This,
 she explained, was partially because of the increased frequency and strength
 of public comments by them, especially on the issue of sealed indictments. The
 Russian Minister questioned the legality of sealed indictments and secondly
 he argued that sealed indictments deprived willing governments of the opportunity
 to comply, as well as depriving indictees of the chance to surrender. In reply
 Justice Arbour stated that the legality of sealed indictments should be debated
 in court and should not be a political matter. On the second point of depriving
 willing governments, she pointed out that 25 outstanding arrest warrants, many
 easily executable, existed in Republika Srpska (RS). As to the question of depriving
 individuals of the chance of surrendering, she felt this had no air of reality.
 Justice Arbour stated that the sealed indictment process would continue until
 the authorities executed outstanding warrants on public indictments. She repeated
 a request to the Minister to give diplomatic support in order to persuade the
 FRY and RS to execute arrest warrants. The Minister gave no undertaking in this
 regard, she noted.
 
 Lastly, JusticeArbour drew attention to the recent guilty plea to genocide at the Rwanda Tribunal.
 She stated that this was a very significant development.
 
   
 QUESTIONS: 
   Asked whetherJustice Arbour expected a show down tomorrow at the hearing. Justice
 Arbour replied that she expected the law to be obeyed. The legal requirement
 was for the court to defer to the Tribunal and for the men to be detained
 and transferred.
   When askedhow many Tribunal people would attend the hearing, Justice Arbour said she
 could not be sure but that neither she nor the Deputy Prosecutor would attend.
   Asked whatthe Tribunal would do if the hearing went ahead, Justice Arbour said that
 this would signal the end of the road. It would not be sufficient to give
 a technical report to the Security Council. She would recommend that the President
 undertake a full inventory of non-compliance. She said that the fact that
 the hearing was still going ahead tomorrow was not a good sign. She felt that
 there was no ambiguity over the deferral and no local impediment, therefore
 any non-compliance should be seen as defiance.
   Asked aboutPresident Tudjmans recent comments on indictments being prepared for
 five or six generals. Justice Arbour stated that she was unaware of the context
 of those comments but that the tone was belligerent and aggressive.
   Asked whetherit was clear who the suspects might be in the hearings tomorrow, Justice Arbour
 said that it was not. The invitation received did not indicate the targets
 of the investigation. When asked whether a court could hold hearings without
 a suspect, Justice Arbour said that as it was a military court she did not
 know, it was only clear that the three would give evidence.
   Asked whatthe obligations of the Tribunal were when asked to transfer evidence, Justice
 Arbour explained that there was no obligation except to hand over material
 to any accused after their initial appearance under disclosure obligations.
 They were also obliged to give evidence and information for indictments. They
 had no obligation to any national court, indeed they had primacy over national
 courts, she stated.
   Asked whetherthe Russian Foreign Minister commented on the way Krstic was arrested - a
 reference to reports that he was tortured - she replied that he only spoke
 of the issue of sealed indictments. Further, Justice Arbour categorically
 stated that the allegations of torture were completely without foundation.
 She had spoken to General Clark and was totally satisfied that the arrest
 was handled appropriately. Any suggestion to the contrary was outrageous and
 scandalous, she said.
   Asked whethershe had seen any signs that the Russian Foreign Minister accepted her explanations,
 Justice Arbour replied that she had stated her position fully and frankly
 and that he understood the situation perfectly, although this was not necessarily
 acceptance. She further stated that, if there had previously been any misapprehension
 over any part of the sealed indictment issue, there was not now.
   Asked whetherthe Russian stance in the Security Council impeded the work of the Tribunal,
 Justice Arbour replied that the Security Council was there to give assistance,
 especially the permanent members. She continued saying that she found it puzzling
 that anyone should criticise legal and effective methods without offering
 any alternative.
   A journalistpointed out that one reason given to explain sealed indictments was that they
 helped make arrests possible and asked whether this made any sense for those
 indicted in the FRY and Croatia, where SFOR had no mandate. Justice Arbour
 replied that the policy gave a strategic advantage to any authority willing
 to execute it. She further explained that, if a government was willing to
 execute an arrest warrant and secrecy would aid them, then she would request
 a sealed indictment.
   Asked whetherat the hearing in Belgrade the Tribunal personnel would stand and say arrest
 those men, Justice Arbour answered that it would not be quite like that,
 but that the Tribunal had already requested that the military court detain
 the suspects on behalf of the Tribunal.
 ***** 
 |