Brammertz to present report on Monday

Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz will present his regular report on Serbia's cooperation with The Hague to the UN Security Council on Monday.

Izvor: Tanjug

Sunday, 05.06.2011.

16:29

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Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz will present his regular report on Serbia's cooperation with The Hague to the UN Security Council on Monday. He is expected to emphasize in his address that Serbia has fulfilled its main international obligation by extraditing Ratko Mladic. Brammertz to present report on Monday Brammertz sent his written report to the UN Security Council three weeks before the former Bosnian Serb leader was arrested and this report will not be changed but it will be completed by an oral presentation which will also be included in official UN Security Council documents. Although the written report points to many shortcomings, the Hague Tribunal chief prosecutor said that he would commend Mladic’s arrest in his oral report. Pointing out that the report represents the first objective analysis of cooperation in the field and that he kept telling Belgrade that a successful arrest requires simultaneous efforts and multidisciplinary approach, Brammertz said that the arrest was made when the police had become more engaged in the search. He noted that there was no reason for him to change the critical report although it had to be said that by arresting Mladic Serbia had fulfilled one of its main international obligations, which would certainly be presented to the UN Security Council in the positive light. “As a result of this arrest, only one of 161 indictees remains at large today,” he said. When asked whether Brammertz will confirm Monday that Serbia fully cooperates with The Hague, Brammertz's Special Advisor Frederick Swinnen said Sunday that one needed to wait for the oral report, in which Brammertz would certainly mention the remaining fugitive Goran Hadzic. Serge Brammertz (FoNet, file)

Brammertz to present report on Monday

Brammertz sent his written report to the UN Security Council three weeks before the former Bosnian Serb leader was arrested and this report will not be changed but it will be completed by an oral presentation which will also be included in official UN Security Council documents.

Although the written report points to many shortcomings, the Hague Tribunal chief prosecutor said that he would commend Mladić’s arrest in his oral report.

Pointing out that the report represents the first objective analysis of cooperation in the field and that he kept telling Belgrade that a successful arrest requires simultaneous efforts and multidisciplinary approach, Brammertz said that the arrest was made when the police had become more engaged in the search.

He noted that there was no reason for him to change the critical report although it had to be said that by arresting Mladić Serbia had fulfilled one of its main international obligations, which would certainly be presented to the UN Security Council in the positive light.

“As a result of this arrest, only one of 161 indictees remains at large today,” he said.

When asked whether Brammertz will confirm Monday that Serbia fully cooperates with The Hague, Brammertz's Special Advisor Frederick Swinnen said Sunday that one needed to wait for the oral report, in which Brammertz would certainly mention the remaining fugitive Goran Hadžić.

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