| Pleasenote that this is not a verbatim transcript of the Press Briefing. It is merely
 a summary.
 
 ICTY WeeklyPress Briefing
 
 Date:
 8 January 2002
 
 Time:
 11.30
 
 
 
 REGISTRY ANDCHAMBERS
 
 Jim
 Landale, Spokesman for Registry and Chambers, made the following statement:
 
 Good morning andhappy New Year,
 
 As you all know,pursuant to Rule 73 bis of the Rules of Procedure and Evidence, the pre-trial
 conference for the Milosevic Kosovo trial will be held tomorrow, Wednesday 9
 January 2002, but you should note that it will start at 9.30 a.m. and not 9
 a.m. as previously advertised. You are all welcome to attend.
 
 
 On 4 January,Judge Richard May, in his capacity as pre-trial Judge, issued an order setting
 out the issues to be raised by the Trial Chamber during the hearing. The order
 states that:
 
 
 The Prosecutionshould be prepared to address the Trial Chamber at the pre-trial conference,
 on the following matters:
 
 a. Thenumber of Prosecution witnesses to be called;
 
 b. The protectivemeasures, if any, likely to be sought for each witness;
 
 c. The orderin which the witnesses are to be called;
 
 d. The numberof witness statements or transcripts of prior testimony sought to be admitted
 pursuant to Rule 92 bis of the Rules and the proposed timetable for submission
 of those documents and determination by the Trial Chamber;
 
 e. The currentstatus of disclosure pursuant to Rule 66 (A) of the Rules, including the necessary
 translations into the language of the accused;
 
 f. The currentstatus of translation into one of the working languages of the International
 Tribunal of all documents to be produces as exhibits during trial; and
 
 g. The currentstatus of disclosure of exculpatory material pursuant to Rule 68 of the Rules;
 
 
 
 The order alsostates that "the amici curiae should address the Trial Chamber at the
 pre-trial conference as to any extensions to their brief (if any) which they
 consider appropriate".
 
 
 In addition on4 January, the Trial Chamber issued its decision on the Prosecution’s Motion
 for Protective Measures. Copies of that will be available after this briefing.
 
 
 On 21 December2001, Judge Aphons Orie issued orders on the motions for provisional release
 from both Miodrag Jokic and Rahim Ademi, which were filed 18 and 21 December
 2001 respectively, in which he ordered "that the Motion[s] and all related
 filings or relevant documents be remitted to the Trial Chamber seized of the
 case for it to decide on the merits of the Motion[s] in due course".
 
 
 We will keep youinformed as to any developments with regard to both of those cases.
 
 
 Following thedecision on 14 December 2001 by the Appeals Chamber to deny Momcilo Krajisnik
 provisional release, on 29 December a ‘Renewed Motion for Provisional Release’
 was filed. In the motion, among other things, the accused argues that the composition
 of the Trial Chamber has now changed with the replacement of Judge Fassi Fihri
 with Judge O-Gon Kwon and that "It may well be that Judge O-Gon Kwon
 would be persuaded by arguments made by the defense which had been deemed by
 Judge Patrick Lipton Robinson to warrant provisional release". Copies
 of that motion will be available after this.
 
 
 On 19 December2001, scheduling orders for a joint hearing on the Prosecution’s Motion for
 Joinder and Joint status conference were filed in Obrenovic, Dragan Jokic and
 Blagojevic cases. The hearing has been set for Tuesday 15 January between 9.30
 and 1 p.m. and 2.30 and 4 p.m. in Courtroom I.
 
 
 On 21 December,we received copies of the Defence Response to the Prosecution’s Appeal Brief
 in the Krstic case. Copies will be available after this.
 
 
 On 4 January,we received the Defence Preliminary Motion in the Banovic case. Again, copies
 available after this.
 
 
 In terms of theupcoming court schedule:
 
 
 -Tomorrow, Wednesday9 January, there will be a status conference in the Nikolic case in Courtroom
 II between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m.
 
 -On Friday
 11 January, there will be a status conference in the Banovic case in Courtroom
 I at 2.30 p.m.
 
 -And as
 I have already mentioned, the hearing on motion for joinder, in the Obrenovic,
 Dragan Jokic and Blagojevic cases is set for Tuesday 15 January.
 
   
 
 
 Florence Hartmann,Spokeswoman for the Office of the Prosecutor, made the following statement:
 
 
 	I would liketo wish you all a very good, exciting and successful 2002. I would also like
 to tell you that the Prosecutor has been back at the Tribunal since yesterday.
 She will remain working in The Hague until next week. During the third and fourth
 weeks of January she will be in Arusha and Kigali.
 
   
 QUESTIONS: 
 
   	Asked whethertomorrow’s pre-trial conference would be the last one to take place before
 the beginning of the trial, Landale replied that, to his understanding, it
 would be the last conference in which Milosevic would appear before 12 February.
 He added, however, that there could be a hearing under Rule 92 bis
 at which he would not have to appear.
 
   	Asked whetherthere was any news on the Prosecutor’s request to appeal against the Decision
 on joinder in the Milosevic case, Landale replied that there was no news on
 this issue for the time being. He added that this issue was with the Appeals
 Chamber not the Trial Chamber so it did not have any direct effect on the
 pre-trial conference tomorrow, however, it was reasonable to expect that it
 was something that would be looked at in the near future.
 
   	Asked tore-confirm that this issue was not expected to be raised during the pre-trial
 conference, Landale replied that this was the case. He added that there could
 be passing references made to it, but it was not a subject that would be focused
 upon.
 
   	Asked toconfirm that 12 February was still the planned starting date for the Milosevic
 Kosovo case, Landale replied that at this time this was the case.
 
   	Asked foran update on the conditions of detention of Mr. Milosevic and whether there
 was still a camera in his cell, Landale replied that there was no camera in
 his cell. He added that Mr. Milosevic was being treated under the same conditions
 as all the other detainees.
 
   	Asked foran update on Milosevic’s recent visits, Landale replied that he received visits
 from his two Belgrade lawyers yesterday and today. They were also scheduled
 to visit him tomorrow. Apart from that the last visits were made last year.
 
   	Asked whetherthere was any news about any future visits from his wife, Landale replied
 that he believed that there would be a visit by his wife in the near future.
 
   		Askedwhether Milosevic or the amici curaie had filed any documents since
 Milosevic’s last appearance in court, Landale replied that as far as the accused
 went, no. As far as the amici curaie went he would have to check, because
 it made reference in the Trial Chamber Order to briefs by the amici curaie
 which he had not yet seen.
 
   	Asked whetherthere had been any written indication from Milosevic that he had changed his
 position, Landale replied that there had not.
 
   	Asked whetherthere was any indication as to whether Milosevic was now reading the documents
 sent to him, Landale replied that right from the outset Milosevic had access
 to that material. Whether he was now reading it or not, he would check, he
 added.
 
   	Asked whetherhe had received a visit from the French lawyer Jacques Verges, Landale replied
 that he would check into this.
 
   	Asked whythe Prosecutor was not in favour of the provisional release request made by
 Rahim Ademi, Hartmann replied that the OTP decided on the issue of provisional
 release on a case by case basis. She added that there where cases were the
 OTP supported requests for provisional release and others where they did not
 support them. The OTP did not support the provisional release for all the
 Bosniak cases. It did support the Halilovic motion for release. It was against
 the motion from Hadzihasanovic, Aligic and Kubura.
 
 In the caseof Ademi the OTP’s position was that he was not fulfilling all of the conditions
 the OTP established under its criteria for provisional release. The OTP opposed
 the motion and the decision had to be taken by the Chamber. The issue was
 still ongoing and there had been no public hearing on this issue.
 
 
   	Asked fora comment on stories in the media in the last weeks which stated that several
 accused wished to hand themselves over to the Tribunal, Hartmann replied that
 on the basis of what the OTP knew it was only media speculation. The OTP was
 in no position to comment as to whether there had been any discussions in
 their own countries with their own authorities. The OTP had not been informed
 of any possible arrivals. Usually the OTP or the Registry would be informed
 a few hours or days before a voluntary surrender, to make sure that an accused
 could express their will to voluntarily surrender without being arrested while
 travelling to The Hague.
 
 	Landaleadded that the Tribunal would welcome any voluntary surrender as it would
 get the new year off to a good start. It was still the obligation for all
 indictees to be apprehended and brought to The Hague, he added.
 
 
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