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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: 24 April 2002
  
  Time: 2:00 p.m. 
  
  REGISTRY AND CHAMBERS 
  
Jim Landale, 
  Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement: 
  
 - I am on my 
  own today. Florence is on business with the Prosecutor. She will then be going 
  on two weeks leave and will be back in The Hague in mid-May. You can ring Liljana 
  (Florence's colleague) on extension 8958 and she will seek answers or clarifications 
  to any questions for the OTP you might have in the coming days. 
  
 - I should alert 
  you that Judge May, the Presiding Judge in the Milosevic case, will be making 
  a statement at the beginning of this afternoon's session at 2.30 p.m. concerning 
  the facilities available to the accused, Slobodan Milosevic, in order for him 
  to properly prepare his defence case. This might be of some interest to the 
  media, therefore, I will endeavor to be finished in good time for you to make 
  it up to court to hear it.  
  
In terms of 
  court documents: 
  
- On 18 April 
  the 'Decision on the Prosecution Request for Agreement of Trial Chamber to 
  Amended Schedule of Filings' was filed. The Trial Chamber ruled that 'the 
  Prosecution shall file its pre-trial material by 1 June 2002 and that thereafter 
  any pre-trial material may be admitted only on good cause being shown'. 
  
- On 19 April, 
  the 'Response by the Amici Curiae to the Prosecution's Application for Leave 
  to File an Interlocutory Appeal' was filed.  
  
- On 22 April, 
  the 'Prosecution's Motion for Variation of an Order of the Trial Chamber' 
  was filed.  
  
- On 23 April, 
  the 'Prosecution's Reply to the "Response by the Amici Curiae to Prosecution's 
  Application for Leave to File an Interlocutory Appeal"' was filed.
   
  
- In addition, 
  on the 22 April, two signed declarations from Dragoslav Ogjanovic and Zdenko 
  Tomanovic were filed giving their consent to act as Legal Associates for Milosevic 
  and agreeing to be bound by the provisions of the Statute and Rules of Procedure 
  and Evidence, as well as the Code of Professional Conduct for Defence Counsel 
  Appearing before the ICTY, the Rules of Detention, and any other Rules and Regulations 
  of the ICTY and Judicial Orders which might apply to them. 
  
Copies of those 
  documents will be available after this.  
  
- In the Krajisnik 
  and Plavsic case, we have received a scheduling order of 19 April setting a 
  status conference for Friday 10 May, commencing at 9.30 a.m. in front Pre-trial 
  Judge May.  
  
- In the Dragan 
  Jokic case on 18 April, a Decision was rendered by a bench of the Appeals Chamber 
  allowing Jokic's appeal against the Trial Chamber's decision of 28 March 2002, 
  refusing his provisional release.  
  
- In the Krnojelac 
  appeal, the President of the Tribunal, Judge Claude Jorda, has appointed Judges 
  Shahabuddeen, Guney, Gunawardana, Pocar and Meron to the Appeals Chamber to 
  hear the appeal.  
  
- ICTY Outreach 
  is hosting a visit by 'Medica Mondiale', a Cologne-based organisation that assists 
  women traumatized by war. Two women from their Cologne office and three from 
  their legal department in Kosova participated in the three-day visit.  
  
- And, this Thursday, 
  Friday and Saturday, Christian Rohde, the Chief of the Office for Legal Aid 
  and Detention Matters, along with ICTY Outreach representatives will be in Belgrade, 
  Nis and Novi Sad to give presentations and answer questions from members of 
  the Serbian Bar Association on applicable law and defence matters. 
  
  Questions: 
  
  Asked for a 
    reminder of the Rules concerning detainee telephone calls at the Detention 
    Unit, Landale replied that there were two phones, one for privileged calls 
    and the other for general calls made on a non-privileged basis. An accused 
    could use the latter with a phone card, at their own expense and could call 
    whomever they wished to call. The privileged phone was for communication between 
    a defendant and his lawyers or legal associates, he said. 
  Asked for confirmation 
    that an accused could make calls to any number they wished on the non-privileged 
    phone (bound by certain Rules, like not giving interviews), given the fact 
    that Milosevic said this morning that the phone he used showed the number 
    he had dialed to be an unaurthorised number, Landale replied that this was 
    the case. 
  Asked whether 
    there were numbers that the accused were not authorised to call, Landale replied 
    that there were specific technical arrangements and adjustments that could 
    be made to the phones to ensure that only the numbers authorised for privileged 
    communications could be dialed from the phone for privileged calls. 
  Asked whether 
    this referred only to phone calls that were privileged and not monitored, 
    and that on the phone that was monitored an accused could dial anywhere, Landale 
    replied that this was correct. 
  Asked whether 
    there was any news from Belgrade concerning possible surrenders, when the 
    Tribunal expected them to arrive and whether the Tribunal was prepared for 
    them, Landale replied that the Tribunal was prepared. Everything was in place 
    to receive and to welcome any of the indictees who were currently at large 
    who might arrive. The Tribunal had ample space in the Detention Unit to accommodate 
    them and the Tribunal looked forward to their arrival in order to get on and 
    process their cases. In terms of specific information, he could not go into 
    details. The Tribunal never went into details as to what logistical arrangements 
    might have been put into place to assist any transfer. He concluded that he 
    would keep the media up to date when any individual arrived at the Detention 
    Unit. 
  Asked if he 
    could say whether he expected anyone to arrive tomorrow or Monday, Landale 
    replied that they had all seen what had been said in the media and a lot of 
    that spoke for itself. The practice of the Tribunal was not to make any comment 
    or confirmations before something actually took place. 
  Asked whether, 
    if any of the Vukovar three came to The Hague, any of the materials used as 
    evidence in the Dokmanovic case would be available for use in this case or 
    whether these documents would have to be re-tendered again as evidence, Landale 
    replied that this would be a question for the Trial Chamber to which this 
    case would be assigned. The first step for the Tribunal was to ensure that 
    all three individuals on that Indictment were transferred together, or close 
    together, to make sure that the Tribunal could put all of them on trial at 
    the same time for that Indictment. The question of use being made of any materials, 
    testimony, evidence that came up in the Dokmanovic trial was a question of 
    admissibility and was one for the Judges. 
  Asked whether 
    it was correct that following the Rule 61 hearing some rights of the three 
    had been cancelled, for example that they could not question witnesses who 
    had testified in the Dokmanovic case, Landale replied that any accused had 
    a fundamental right to cross-examine any witness who testified in court, in 
    their trial, against them. That was something that would not change. 
  
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