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 Please 
  note that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely 
  a summary. 
    
  
ICTY 
  Weekly Press Briefing 
  Date: 
  29 November 2000 
  Time: 
  11:30 a.m. 
  
REGISTRY 
  AND CHAMBERS
  Jim 
  Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers made the following statement: 
  
  
This 
  morning, as I announced last week, a diplomatic information seminar is being 
  held here at the Tribunal for the diplomatic community here in The Hague and 
  other representatives of UN Member States. The Ambassadors will be briefed by 
  President Claude Jorda, the Prosecutor and the Deputy Registrar, who will update 
  the attendees on the challenges facing the Tribunal and will underline the fact 
  that cooperation and support from all States is essential to fulfill the Tribunal’s 
  mandate.  
  
  
Also, 
  a three-day plenary session of the Judges of the Tribunal will begin this afternoon. 
  This is one of the regular twice-yearly plenaries held at the Tribunal, and 
  will focus on the Tribunal’s Rules of Procedure and Evidence. We will inform 
  you in due time of any decisions made during the plenary.  
  
  
In 
  the Naletilic and Martinovic case, we have received a pre-trial brief for Naletilic 
  which you can pick up after this. We expect to receive a pre-trial brief for 
  Martinovic in due course.  
  
  
In 
  addition, Trial Chamber I denied, on 27 November, Naletilic’s request to be 
  given the opportunity to take a lie detector test. In coming to its decision, 
  the Trial Chamber stated that "the consensus in the scientific community 
  and in the domestic jurisdictions surveyed is that polygraph examinations are 
  an unreliable indication of credibility and that, accordingly, it is not an 
  expense that is necessarily and reasonably incurred." Furthermore, the 
  Trial Chamber noted that the introduction of such evidence is unlikely to expedite 
  the proceedings and that ultimately, it is for the Trial Chamber to determine 
  the credibility of the witnesses and the accused.  
  
  
In 
  the same case, the Trial Chamber, on 27 November, granted a Prosecution motion 
  to admit transcripts and exhibits tendered during the testimony of certain witnesses 
  in the Kordic and Cerkez case and Blaskic case. According to the Trial Chamber, 
  these materials are relevant to facts in dispute in the present case, namely 
  the existence of an international armed conflict, the applicability of the Geneva 
  Conventions of 1949, and whether there was a widespread or systematic attack 
  against the civilian population. 
  
  
Finally, 
  in the same case, on 28 November, the Trial Chamber granted the Prosecutor’s 
  motion to amend count five of the indictment to add a reference to Article 52 
  of the Third Geneva Convention, which prohibits dangerous and humiliating labour. 
  The Trial Chamber further ordered the accused to enter a plea to this charge 
  at the pre-trial conference scheduled to take place on 7 December. 
  
  
  
Florence 
  Hartmann, Spokesperson for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP), made no statement. 
  
  
  
Questions: 
  
  Asked whether 
    a representative from the Host Nation had been invited to the Diplomatic Seminar, 
    Landale replied that he believed so, as the invitations had gone to the diplomatic 
    community as well as some other representatives of UN member states.  
  Asked whether 
    there was any news of new evidence coming from Zagreb for the Kordic and Cerkez 
    case, Hartmann replied that receiving evidence was a process that happened 
    all the time, not only for this case but also for other cases. She added that 
    evidence was sure to continue to come after the end of the Kordic and Cerkez 
    trial. It was impossible to say precisely when, where or what would come, 
    she concluded. 
  Asked whether 
    the Tribunal had received any reaction from Zagreb following criticism of 
    Croatia’s cooperation with the Tribunal, Hartmann replied that it was not 
    for the OTP to comment on the reaction of Croatia. 
  Asked whether 
    the Naletilic and Martinovic case was the first time that a Trial Chamber 
    had given a ruling about the admissibility of a lie detector test, Landale 
    replied that, as far as he knew, it was. 
  Asked for further 
    details of what would be discussed during the Plenary, Landale replied that 
    the Plenary would mainly focus upon the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, as 
    before, looking at ways the procedures could be streamlined and made more 
    effective to speed up the whole process.  
  
The Judges would 
    look at possible amendments to that effect and then decide whether to adopt 
    those amendments. In the past, the Tribunal had published a list of amendments 
    to the Rules and it was expected that this would happen again, if appropriate.
     
  
  
  Asked how the 
    Prosecutor and President regarded the reception they received in New York, 
    in particular from the Security Council, Landale replied that the President 
    had been received positively.  
  
He added that, 
    speaking for the President, the points he made in his speeches were taken 
    on board and would hopefully help in a effort to support the proposals that 
    the President (on behalf of the Judges) had put before the Security Council 
    and the working group set up by the Security Council to look at some of the 
    additional resources requested by the President. Landale added that these 
    included the issue of ad litem Judges and additional Judges for the 
    Appeals Chamber. Hopefully, in the not too distant future, a favorable response 
    would come from the Security Council on those matters, he concluded. 
  
  
  Asked whether 
    there was any news about the budget, Landale replied that it was early to 
    comment at this stage. He added that by the end of the year the Tribunal would 
    have a better idea. 
  
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