Brammertz to embark on three-day Bosnia visit

Chief Hague Prosecutor Serge Brammertz will begin a three-day visit to Sarajevo on Monday.

Izvor: Tanjug

Sunday, 03.05.2009.

19:08

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Chief Hague Prosecutor Serge Brammertz will begin a three-day visit to Sarajevo on Monday. He will also visit Belgrade and Zagreb later in May within the preparations of a regular report for the United Nations (UN) Security Council in June. Brammertz to embark on three-day Bosnia visit In Sarajevo, Brammertz will speak with the local officials and international representatives about cooperation and the realization of the plan to complete the work of the Hague, spokeswoman Olga Kavran has said. The precise date for the visit to Belgrade has not been set yet, she said, but it is planned that Brammertz will meet with Serbian officials during a working visit to discuss Serbia's cooperation with that court and the activities being taken to locate the remaining two indictees, Ratko Mladic and Goran Hadzic. In Belgrade on Sunday, National Committee for Hague Cooperation chairman Rasim Ljajic said that all the necessary prerequisites exist for Serbia's cooperation with that court to be completed by the end of this year. "I expect, I hope, and I am confident that this can happen," Ljajic said in a statement for Tanjug. "All these efforts must yield results," he pointed out. Parallel actions are under way to apprehend both Ratko Mladic and Goran Hadzic, but Mladic is the top priority, he said. All the security services are doing everything in their power and in the most professional way possible, and there are no longer any problems in their communication and coordination, Ljajic was quoted as saying. "It is also very important that there is a high degree of confidence between the National Committee and the Hague, which was not the case earlier," he said. "There are no longer any doubts about everything that we are doing to locate the remaining two indictees. We do not have to explain our good intentions, that we really wish to do this, because it is something that is implicit and clearly visible," Ljajic said. The committee "no longer has any problems with the United States of America, either, in that regard", Ljajic stated, and went on to say, "or with the 25 countries of the European Union, with the exception of the Netherlands and partly Belgium".

Brammertz to embark on three-day Bosnia visit

In Sarajevo, Brammertz will speak with the local officials and international representatives about cooperation and the realization of the plan to complete the work of the Hague, spokeswoman Olga Kavran has said.

The precise date for the visit to Belgrade has not been set yet, she said, but it is planned that Brammertz will meet with Serbian officials during a working visit to discuss Serbia's cooperation with that court and the activities being taken to locate the remaining two indictees, Ratko Mladić and Goran Hadžić.

In Belgrade on Sunday, National Committee for Hague Cooperation chairman Rasim Ljajić said that all the necessary prerequisites exist for Serbia's cooperation with that court to be completed by the end of this year.

"I expect, I hope, and I am confident that this can happen," Ljajić said in a statement for Tanjug. "All these efforts must yield results," he pointed out.

Parallel actions are under way to apprehend both Ratko Mladić and Goran Hadžić, but Mladić is the top priority, he said.

All the security services are doing everything in their power and in the most professional way possible, and there are no longer any problems in their communication and coordination, Ljajić was quoted as saying.

"It is also very important that there is a high degree of confidence between the National Committee and the Hague, which was not the case earlier," he said.

"There are no longer any doubts about everything that we are doing to locate the remaining two indictees. We do not have to explain our good intentions, that we really wish to do this, because it is something that is implicit and clearly visible," Ljajić said.

The committee "no longer has any problems with the United States of America, either, in that regard", Ljajić stated, and went on to say, "or with the 25 countries of the European Union, with the exception of the Netherlands and partly Belgium".

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