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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: 1 March 2000
  Time: 11:30 a.m.  
  
REGISTRY AND 
  CHAMBERS
  Jim Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers made the following statement: 
  
  
Firstly, the recently 
  arrived Judge Fausto Pocar of Italy has been assigned to sit on the Appeals 
  Chamber. He will take the place of Judge Tieya Wang.  
  
  
Secondly, Trial 
  Chamber III issued a decision on 28 February rejecting an application by Stevan 
  Todorovic to reopen the Trial Chamber’s decision of 27 July 1999 which held 
  that the ICRC had a right to non-disclosure in judicial proceedings of information 
  in the possession of its employees relating to its activities. 
  
  
The 27 July 1999 
  decision was related to a witness who was a former employee of the ICRC, whom 
  the Prosecution has intended to call and who was prepared voluntarily to give 
  evidence.  
  
  
Todorovic had 
  in the meantime sought assistance from the ICRC and had applied for the ICRC 
  Decision to be re-opened and set aside. The application was dismissed by the 
  Trial Chamber because Todorovic was not party to the original decision. Both 
  the ICRC and the Prosecution had opposed the application. 
  
  
We also trying 
  to make copies of the pre-trial briefs for the upcoming Krstic case, the Kunarac 
  Kovac and Vukovic case and the defence appeal brief in the Furundzija appeal.
   
  
  
	Finally, a 
  reminder that the appeal hearing in the Furundzija case will take place tomorrow 
  2 March at 1000 in Courtroom I, and the Judgement and Sentence in the Blaskic 
  case will be handed down at 1030 this Friday, 3 March. You are of course invited 
  to attend both of those.  
  
  
  
  
OFFICE OF THE 
  PROSECUTOR
  Paul Risley, Spokesman for the Office of the Prosecutor (OTP), made no statement. 
  
  
  QUESTIONS:   
  
  	Asked whether 
    there was any news on "Tuta", Landale replied that the medical team 
    visited "Tuta" at the end of last week. He added that the Tribunal 
    was now waiting for the full written report from the team to be submitted 
    to the Registrar. The next move would be based on what was contained in the 
    report. Any decision would be taken in close consultation between the Registrar, 
    the Prosecutor and the President, he concluded. 
  	Asked when 
    the report was expected, Landale replied that it could well be submitted in 
    the coming days. 
  Asked whether 
    this week in the Kvocka case was the first time an accused had given testimony 
    in this way and what was due to happen next, Landale replied that as far as 
    he knew this was the first time the Tribunal had defendants testifying before 
    the Prosecutions case in chief. He added that the projected timetable for 
    Kvocka and Radic would be three days on the stand each and then the continuation 
    of normal proceedings. Essentially this was a time saving device proposed 
    by the Defence for both of these accused. Agreed facts would not have to be 
    revisited by the Prosecution, he concluded. 
  	Asked in 
    what way this procedure would be time saving, Landale replied that this could 
    prevent the Prosecution having to run through the entirety of their case only 
    for the Defendants to say that they were not disputing certain facts or that 
    they admitted certain facts. Some material might not have to be covered twice, 
    he concluded.   
Risley added 
      that it was his understanding that the Prosecution would present its case 
      following the two three day blocks of testimony from the two individuals 
      the Prosecution would start with its case. He did not believe that the Prosecution 
      would do its cross-examination immediately following the three days of testimony. 
      He believed that the OTP would reserve the right till the end of presenting 
      their case. That was a decision to be made by the senior trial attorney, 
      he concluded. 
  
  	Asked for 
    clarification on the Prosecutor’s proposal that parts of trials could take 
    place in the former Yugoslavia, Landale replied that there had been discussions 
    on the possibility of holding hearings in the former Yugoslavia, however, 
    he cautioned that this depended on a variety of factors which would determine 
    whether it would be possible to go ahead with the proposal. The first being 
    finance to support the operation of having a portion of the proceedings outside 
    of The Hague and there were also security considerations that had to be taken 
    into account for, amongst others, the witnesses and the detainees themselves. 
    This was not something scheduled to take place in weeks or months, it was 
    something being looked at in the long term. 
  
	Risley went 
    on to say that there were two very separate proposals and that they should 
    not be confused, as some of the Croatian media seemed to have done. The Prosecutor’s 
    remarks in Arusha last week were not to support placing cases before the national 
    courts. The proposal was for sittings of the Tribunal trials to take place 
    within the regions of the two tribunals, either in Arusha or the former Yugoslavia. 
    This had to be budgeted for and the issues of security and cost of moving 
    the court would have to be taken into account, he concluded. 
  
  	Asked whether 
    the whole Trial Chamber would be moved under the Prosecutor’s proposal, Risley 
    said that it was a logistical and administrative matter entirely different 
    from the larger idea raised of domestic courts conducting entire trials, which 
    was a more long-term issue. He would give an update on it. 
  Asked whether 
    there were any examples in Croatia or Bosnia where trials had taken place 
    in front of national courts, Risley said that he was not aware of any. He 
    added that the OTP’s Rules of the Road program existed for the most part for 
    Bosnia and if there were examples, Bosnia was where they would be found. 
  	Asked for 
    an updated estimate of victims in the Krstic case, Risley replied that it 
    would be the intention of the Prosecution to release very specific and detailed 
    evidence and information on the opening days of the trial. Some of the documentation 
    and results of the forensic investigations over the past five years would 
    be given. 
  	Asked whether 
    figures had been given in the past, Risley replied that they had, however, 
    in this case he did not wish to preempt the Prosecution. 
  	Asked how 
    long the opening statement would take, Risley replied that it would take at 
    least a day. He added that it might be possible to provide a written text 
    of the opening statement. 
  	Asked whether 
    there had been any developments between The Hague and the Croatian Authorities, 
    Risley replied that there was nothing to report on this issue. Informal contacts 
    continued with the Government. 
  	Asked for 
    an explanation of the fact that a deadline for documents requested from Croatia 
    concerning the Kordic case had expired on the 28 February, Risley replied 
    that there were several ongoing matters that deserved urgency however his 
    understanding was that the Prosecutor would bring up the issue with the Judges 
    in this case and that it would then be a matter for the Registry He believed 
    nothing had happened yet. 
  	Asked for 
    a comment of the visit by President Chirac, Risley replied that the Prosecutor 
    was pleased with meetings that Tribunal officials held with the President 
    and that a separate private meeting was very positive. 
  
	Landale 
    added that the meetings with the Registrar and President were also very positive. 
  
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