| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTYWeekly Press Briefing
 
 Date: 3 October 2001
 
 Time: 11:00 a.m.
 
 
 
 
 REGISTRYAND CHAMBERS
 
 Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 
 First of all Iwould like to announce that the Sentencing Judgement in the Celebici case will
 be handed down on Tuesday 9 October 2001 at 4.30 p.m.
 
 The sentencinghearing in the Sikirica and others case will now take place on 8, 9, 10 and
 11 October 2001.
 
 In that case,we have now received the Prosecution’s Sentencing Brief. Copies will be available
 after the briefing.
 
 Yesterday, 2 October2001 a motion by Dragan Obrenovic was filed opposing the Prosecutions’ motion
 for joinder with Vidoje Blagojevic and Dragan Jokic. Copies will be made available
 after this briefing.
 
 In addition, amotion was filed on 27 September 2001 by Vidoje Blagojevic requesting an extension
 of time to reply to the Prosecution’s motion for joinder, or in the alternative
 requesting that the Prosecution’s motion be denied.
 
 In the Kunaracand others case, the parties have been ordered to file a redacted public version
 of the Appellant’s brief, the Prosecution’s Response to the Appellant’s Brief,
 and the Prosecution’s Consolidated Brief within seven days of the order being
 filed. The order was filed yesterday, 2 October 2001.
 
 A reminder thatJudge Asoka de Zoysa Gunawardana, who was assigned to the Appeals Chamber of
 the Tribunal by the President of the ICTR on 1 June 2001, will take his solemn
 oath tomorrow, Thursday 4 October at 5.00 p.m.
 
 Finally, a reminderthat there will be a status conference in the Krajisnik and Plavsic case this
 afternoon at 4. 30 p.m. Krajisnik is required to attend.
 
   
 
 
 OFFICEOF THE PROSECUTOR
 
 Florence Hartmann,
 Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor, made no statement.
 
 
 	 
 QUESTIONS: 
 
 
   	Asked whetherthere was any news on Krajisnik’s request for provisional release, Landale
 replied that there was not.
 
   	Asked whetherthe Yugoslav authorities had told the Prosecutor that they could not hand
 over the officers from the Dubrovnik case because of Yugoslavia’s domestic
 law, Hartmann replied that during her visit to Belgrade one month ago, the
 Prosecutor had a meeting with the Yugoslav Minister of Justice, Mr. Markovic.
 She added that during the meeting, Mr. Markovic made it clear that Yugoslavia
 was not in a position to cooperate with the Tribunal until a law on cooperation
 was passed.
 
 The OTP wasinformed during the meeting that the Yugoslav authorities would work on a
 law to be discussed in the Parliament. The OTP insisted again, however, that
 the Yugoslav authorities did not need any specific law on the domestic level
 and that they were obliged as a UN Member State to cooperate with the ICTY.
 She concluded that there was also a Security Council resolution dated November
 1998, which insisted on the obligation of Yugoslavia towards the Tribunal.
 
 
   	Asked whetherthe Tribunal had any information concerning the whereabouts of these accused
 and whether any of them were in Montenegro, Hartmann replied that she could
 not answer this question. She added only that the accused were supposed to
 be in a territory of which the authorities had been served with warrants for
 their arrests.
 
   	Asked fora comment (in the light of the Republika Srpska passing a law on cooperation)
 on the fact that the FRY was now the only country in the region not to have
 signed such a law, Landale reiterated the point that the Tribunal had always
 maintained, that a specific law on cooperation was not needed for the authorities
 in the Republika Srpska to cooperate with the Tribunal. He added, however,
 that now they had passed this law, the Tribunal expected to see immediate,
 firm and concrete results, which meant quite clearly the apprehension and
 transfer of all individuals indicted by the Tribunal who were in the Republika
 Srpska.
 
 	Hartmannadded that the OTP held the same position and expected concrete cooperation
 from the Republika Srpska as it always had. She added, however, that for the
 moment the OTP did not have what it called cooperation, which would include
 non-selective access to witnesses, archives and documents and the arrest of
 fugitives.
 
 
   	Asked toclarify what she meant by non-selective access, Hartmann replied that it meant
 that a country should answer the full requests of the Tribunal, for access
 to individuals for interviews and concerning arrest warrants. Cooperation
 was not sending documents on specific investigation topics with a political
 aim, she concluded.
 
   	Asked whetherthe Tribunal had any contacts with the Croatian authorities concerning Gotovina,
 Hartmann replied that there was no news on Gotovina. She added that in the
 same way the OTP insisted yesterday on the arrest of the officers from the
 former Yugoslavia who were supposed to be in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
 who were still at large, the OTP insisted that Croatia comply with it’s obligations
 and hand over Gotovina as soon as possible. Croatia had the obligation to
 do it immediately.
 
   Asked whetherthe Prosecutor had been in touch at all with officials in Republika Srpska
 and did the OTP have any indication of receiving anything, Hartmann replied
 that the Prosecutor had not been in touch with the authorities there which
 she had met at the beginning of July. The OTP would not react on the law but
 if the statement given in the last days or weeks saying that the cooperation
 would start very soon was true, the OTP was happy and would wait for concrete
 steps.
 
   	Asked onwhat grounds the OTP was so confident when the existence of the Dubrovnik
 indictment was announced early this year that it would actually be executed,
 Hartmann replied that the OTP received assurances from the authorities and
 contacts in Montenegro that they would arrest any of the indictees if they
 appeared to be in Montenegro. Due to the fact that among the four accused
 in the Dubrovnik indictment some of them were believed to be living in Montenegro
 at that time, the OTP hoped that if they were still there they would be arrested
 in the following days.
 
   	Asked whetherthere were any explanations given by Montenegro as to why they were not arrested,
 Hartmann replied that there were. She added that the explanation was that
 they could not be found in the territory of Montenegro.
 
   	Asked whetherthis answer had been prompt, as it should be according to the Tribunal’s Rules
 of Procedure and Evidence, Hartmann replied that the OTP was in contact with
 them about the search. She added that the OTP was finally informed that they
 could not find them at their usual addresses.
 
   	Asked whatmessage she would send to the authorities of Montenegro concerning media reports
 that Strugar was at the moment in Montenegro, Hartmann replied that she would
 send the same message as was sent yesterday in the Press Release.
 
 
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