Case No. IT-95-16-R2
IN THE APPEALS CHAMBER
Before:
Judge Fausto Pocar, Presiding
Judge Liu Daqun
Judge Mehmet Güney
Judge Asoka de Zoysa Gunawardana
Judge Theodor Meron
Registrar:
Mr. Hans Holthuis
Decision of:
7 March 2003
PROSECUTOR
v.
DRAGO JOSIPOVIC
_________________________________________
DECISION ON MOTION FOR REVIEW
_________________________________________
The Office of the Prosecutor:
Mr. Christopher Staker
Counsel for the Accused:
Mr. Ranko Radovic
Mr. Tomislav Pasaric
I. INTRODUCTION
- The Appeals Chamber of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Prosecution
of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian
Law Committed in the Territory of Former Yugoslavia since 1991 ("Appeals
Chamber" and "Tribunal") is seised of the "Request for
Review of the Counsel of the Convicted Drago Josipovic" ("Motion
for Review"), filed on 30 July 2002.1
- Josipovic was a resident of Ahmici village in the Lasva River valley in
Bosnia and Herzegovina. He was a member the Croatian Defence Council (HVO)
and a member of the Ahmici village guard. On the basis of the evidence of
one witness, Witness EE, the Trial Chamber found that, on 16 April 1993, Josipovic
participated in the attack on and burning of Musafer Puscul’s house
which resulted, inter alia, in the murder of Musafer Puscul.2
He was found guilty of crimes against humanity in the form of murder, persecution
and other inhumane acts contrary to articles 5(a), (h) and (i) of the Statute
of the Tribunal ("Statute") respectively. He was sentenced to imprisonment
for 15 years.3
- Josipovic appealed and one of his arguments on appeal was that the evidence
of Witness EE was so unreliable and inconsistent that no reasonable tribunal
could have accepted it as a basis to convict. The thrust of this contention
was that since the Trial Chamber found that Witness EE was mistaken in her
identification of two other attackers, it was impossible to be satisfied beyond
reasonable doubt that she was correct in her identification of Josipovic.4
- On 23 October 2001, the Appeals Chamber rejected this argument. As the Trial
Chamber had done, it relied on the testimony of Witness EE in finding that
Josipovic was involved in the attack on Musafer Puscul’s house on 16
April 1993,5 and affirmed Josipovic’s convictions.
The Appeals Chamber also noted with respect to Witness EE that it was not
unreasonable for a tribunal of fact to accept some but reject other parts
of a witness' testimony.6 Josipovic’s sentence,
however, was revised down from 15 to 12 years’ imprisonment.
- On 21 February 2002, Counsel for Josipovic ("Defence") filed a
"Motion of the Counsel of Drago Josipovic" requesting that the portion
of the case relating to Josipovic be reopened. On 9 July 2002, the Appeals
Chamber rendered its decision dismissing this motion.7
- On 30 July 2002, the Defence filed before the Appeals Chamber the present
Motion for Review pursuant to Article 26 of the Statute and Rule 119 of the
Rules of Procedure and Evidence of the Tribunal ("Rules"). On 6
September 2002, the Prosecution filed its response to the Motion for Review
("Prosecution’s Response")8 and
on 19 September 2002, the Defence filed its reply ("Defence Reply")
in which it requests, inter alia, that certain witnesses be heard.9
On 20 January 2003 the Defence filed a motion requesting an urgent decision
with respect to its request that certain witnesses be heard ("Motion
for Urgent Consideration ").10
II. MOTION FOR REVIEW
- The Defence seeks the review of the case on the basis of the discovery of
new facts not known to it at trial and appeal, and which could have been decisive
factors in reaching the decision to convict Josipovic. It submits two new
facts: (1) the testimony of two new witnesses, Mirsad Osmancevic and Seiba
Osmancevic; (2) the identity of a policeman, Slavko Topalovic, who allegedly
resembles Josipovic and was present at the scene of the crime.
- With regard to the first new fact, the Defence states that, in reaction
to an article published in a newspaper in Sarajevo after the Appeal Judgement
was rendered11, Mirsad Osmancevic contacted the
Defence to say that he saw the movements of Josipovic on the day of the attack
on Ahmici.12 The Defence has since obtained written
statements from Mirsad Osmancevic and his wife Seiba Osmancevic to the effect
that Josipovic was nowhere near the house of Musafer Puscul at the time of
the attack.13
- With regard to the second new fact, the Defence states that the person seen
by Witness EE on 16 April 1993 was not Drago Josipovic but Slavko Topalovic
who, according to the Defence, resembles Josipovic and was involved in the
attack on Ahmici. In support of its contention, it submits photographs of
Drago Josipovic and Slavko Topalovic to show their resemblance. It also attaches
the pay list for March 1993 of members of a unit of the Croatian Military
Police, which the Defence asserts was the unit that attacked the house of
Musafer Puscul, to show that Slavko Topalovic was a member of that unit and
therefore involved in the attack.14 The Defence
further asserts that there are stories in circulation in Vitez according to
which it was Slavko Topalovic, not Drago Josipovic, who was in front of Musafer
Puscul’s house at the relevant time. However, the people from whom the
Defence heard these stories apparently do not wish to testify.15
- The Defence also makes other arguments, inter alia that establishing
the family relationship between Witness EE and other key witnesses of this
case (Witnesses KL, H, SA and B) would further support the argument for rejecting
Witness EE’s identification evidence. It adds that the statement of
Witness AT in the Kordic Case16 is proof
that Josipovic was at the critical time not near any of the attacked houses,
especially not near the house of Witness EE.17
However, the Defence does not claim that these facts are "new facts".
III. APPLICABLE LAW
- Review proceedings are governed by the following provisions of the Statute
and Rules of the Tribunal.
Article 26 of the Statute provides that:
Where a new fact has been discovered which was not known
at the time of the proceedings before the Trial Chambers or the Appeals
Chamber and which could have been a decisive factor in reaching the decision,
the convicted person or the Prosecutor may submit to the International Tribunal
an application for review of the judgement.
Rule 119 dealing with request for review stipulates that:
Where a new fact has been discovered which was not known
to the moving party at the time of the proceedings before a Trial Chamber
or the Appeals Chamber, and could not have been discovered through the exercise
of due diligence, the defence or, within one year after the final judgement
has been pronounced, the Prosecutor, may make a motion to that Chamber for
review of the judgement. If, at the time of the request for review, any
of the Judges who constituted the original Chamber are no longer Judges
of the Tribunal, the President shall appoint a Judge or Judges in their
place.
Rule 120 deals with preliminary examination and states that:
If a majority of Judges of the Chamber constituted pursuant
to Rule 119 agree that the new fact, if proved, could have been a decisive
factor in reaching a decision , the Chamber shall review the judgement,
and pronounce a further judgement after hearing the parties.
- The combined effect of these provisions of the Statute and the Rules is
that in order for the deciding body to proceed to the review of its decision,
the moving party must satisfy the Judges that:
- there is a new fact;
- the new fact was not known to the moving party at the time of the original
proceedings ;
- the failure to discover the new fact was not due to a lack of due diligence
on the part of the moving party; and
- the new fact could have been a decisive factor in reaching the original
decision .18
- In "wholly exceptional circumstances", where the impact of a new
fact on the decision would be such that to ignore it would lead to a miscarriage
of justice, the Chambers may review their decision even though the new fact
was known to the moving party, or was discoverable by it through the exercise
of due diligence.19 As stated in the Tadic
Review:
the Appeals Chamber, whenever it is presented with a
new fact that is of such strength that it would affect the verdict, may,
in order to prevent a miscarriage of justice, step in and examine whether
or not the new fact is a decisive factor, even though the second and third
criteria under Rule 119 of the Rules may not be formally met .20
The Defence does not appear to be arguing that the current application constitutes
such a situation, however the Appeals Chamber will consider whether this is
the case.
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Preliminary consideration
- In the Motion for Review, Josipovic seeks a review of the entire case including
the judgements of both the Trial Chamber and the Appeals Chamber, and the
return of the case to the Trial Chamber for re-hearing.21
By contrast the Prosecution submits that since Rule 119 provides for review
of final judgement, the Defence can only seek review of the Appeals Chamber’s
Judgement.22
- The jurisprudence of the Tribunal with respect to proceedings under Article
26 of the Statute and Rule 119 is clear. In the Delic Review23
and the Tadic Review24, the Appeals Chamber
held that review is only available with respect to final judgement . Since
the Appeals Chamber rendered the final judgement in the instant case, it will
only consider whether the Appeal Judgement should be reviewed.
B. The first "new fact" presented by the Defence:
the testimony of two new witnesses, Mirsad Osmancevic and Seiba Osmancevic.
1. Is the testimony of these witnesses a new fact not known
to the moving party during the proceedings?
- The Defence submits that the testimony of Mirsad and Seiba Osmancevic is
a new fact because it did not know of and could not have discovered these
witnesses until it was contacted by Mirsad Osmancevic.25
The Prosecution contends on the contrary that Josipovic knew of these people
since at least the time of the trial proceedings. The Prosecution notes that
the Trial Chamber heard evidence from Defence witnesses that Josipovic had
given his vest to Mirsad Osmancevic and had brought him to Anto Papic’s
house during the attack of 16 April 1993. It also notes that the Defence relied
on this same argument on appeal.26
- It is clear from the Trial Judgement that, in an attempt to prove that he
had helped Muslims during the attack on Ahmici, Josipovic did indeed submit
at trial that he had given his military vest to Mirsad Osmancevic and brought
him and his wife to the house of Anto Papic for shelter.27
On Appeal, Josipovic again referred to the assistance he had offered these
witnesses.28 Josipovic indeed concedes that he
knew these witnesses at the time of the trial and appeal.29
That he may not have known exactly what they saw on that day – in other
words the precise content of the testimony he now seeks to present as a new
fact – goes rather to his exercise of due diligence, and is dealt with
below.
- However, whether Josipovic knew of the testimony or not, it does not qualify
as a new fact in the terms of Rule 119. The jurisprudence of the Tribunal
has elaborated on the difference between a new fact in the sense of Rule 119,
and additional evidence in the sense of Rule 115 of the Rules. In the Delic
Review, the Appeals Chamber held that:
(t)he distinction is thus between a fact which was not
in issue or considered in the original proceedings (a "new fact"
within the meaning of Rule 119) and additional evidence of a fact which
was in issue or considered in the original proceedings but which evidence
was not available to be given in those proceedings ("additional evidence"
within the meaning of Rule 115).30
- It is therefore the definition of the fact in issue at trial which will
determine the availability of the review procedure. In the Delic Review,
the "new fact " submitted also concerned the identity of the perpetrator
of the crime attributed to Delic (the applicant); in other words, as in this
case, the argument put forward on review was that it was not the applicant
but another who committed the crime in question, and that the witnesses who
identified him as the perpetrator were mistaken . The Appeals Chamber held
that:
The fact in issue at the trial and in the appeal was
whether it was the Applicant who beat (X), and a material fact relevant
to that fact in issue was whether it was the Applicant who called (X)
out to be beaten. That material fact was also in issue at the trial and
in the appeal. Evidence to establish it was given by two witnesses, and
that evidence was strongly contested by the Applicant at the trial . The
statement of Witness W is additional evidence of that material fact, but
it is not of itself a new fact.31
- In the instant case, the applicant – Josipovic – is also challenging
his identification as the perpetrator of the crime. The fact in issue at the
trial and in the appeal was whether Josipovic was part of the group who attacked
Musafer Puscul’s house. Evidence to establish that fact was given at
trial by Witness EE, and it was strongly contested by the Defence. As part
of his challenge to EE’s credibility at trial, Josipovic presented witnesses
to testify that he was in the vicinity of Anto Papic’s house at the
time of the attack, and therefore could not have been part of the attacking
group. Witness EE’s evidence was again challenged on appeal. The statements
of Mr. and Mrs Osmancevic, which are very similar to the evidence presented
by the Defence at trial, are therefore additional evidence of the fact in
issue at trial and on appeal, but are not new facts in themselves.
2. Could Mirsad and Seiba Osmancevic have been discovered
through the exercise of due diligence?
- The requirements set out in Rules 119 and 120 are cumulative. Thus, since
the statements of Mr. and Mrs. Osmancevic are not "new facts", the
Appeals Chamber is not obliged to examine them further. Nonetheless, in order
to address all the arguments made by the parties, the Appeals Chamber will
consider whether the alleged new facts could have been discovered through
the exercise of due diligence. The Defence concession that Josipovic knew
that Mirsad Osmancevic was in Ahmici on the day of the attack , and indeed
that he cited him in evidence before the Appeals Chamber, may be noted. The
Defence goes on to claim, however, that "all what Mirsad Osmancevic had
seen and had known, could not have been known to Drago Josipovic, because
that knowledge was in the head of Mirsad Osmancevic, and he did not want to
talk about it during the hearing and appellate procedure".32
It is unclear whether the Defence is claiming that it contacted Mirsad Osmancevic
and he refused to testify, or whether it is merely explaining that Mirsad
Osmancevic would have refused to testify even if the Defence had contacted
him, which it did not. In the Motion for Review, the Defence claims that it
was impossible for counsel of the accused to contact any Muslims during the
appeal proceedings, so that it could not have met with Mirsad Osmancevic (a
Muslim), suggesting that it did not attempt to speak with him. It also states
that Mr. Osmancevic was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder during
the trial and appeals proceedings.
- Because Josipovic knew, from at least the time of the trial, that Mirsad
and Seiba Osmancevic had been present during the attack on Ahmici he could
have called them to testify on his behalf. The Defence thus has failed to
demonstrate that it could not have obtained statements from these two witnesses
if it had exercised due diligence.
3. Could the testimony of Mirsad and Seiba Osmancevic have
been a decisive factor in reaching the decision to convict Josipovic?
- Again, given that the requirements set out in Rules 119 and 120 of the Rules
for the review of judgements are cumulative, in the light of its previous
findings , the Appeals Chamber is not required to examine further the submissions
of the Defence on the testimony of Mirsad and Seiba Osmancevic. Nonetheless,
in order to address all the arguments made by the parties the Appeals Chamber
will turn to examine whether or not the alleged new facts could have been
a decisive factor in reaching the decision to convict Josipovic. The Defence
argues that the statements of Mr. and Mrs. Osmancevic would have been a decisive
factor in the decision to convict Josipovic because they show that Witness
EE was mistaken in her identification of him as the person who was present
during the attack on Musafer Puscul’s house . The Appeals Chamber notes
that the new witness statements are not materially different to witness testimonies
presented by the Defence at trial. It further recalls that arguments pertaining
to the defence of mistaken identity were presented by the Defence at trial
and were rejected after comprehensive analyses of the accuracy of Witness
EE’s identification of Josipovic. This argument was re-canvassed and
considered by the Appeals Chamber and additional evidence adduced to discredit
Witness EE was rejected.35 Witness EE’s
identification of Josipovic has stood up to considerable scrutiny.
- The Prosecution asserts that it is highly improbable, in light of the non-conclusive
and even incriminating nature of the statements of Mr. and Mrs Osmancevic,
that they could have been a decisive factor in the decision to convict Josipovic.36
The Appeals Chamber notes that, as argued by the Prosecution, the statement
of Mirsad Osmancevic does corroborate the testimony of Witness EE to the extent
that Josipovic was seen at about 5:00 am on 16 April 1993, wearing a military
camouflage vest and carrying something in his hand which Mr. Osmancevic could
not identify (Witness EE stated that Josipovic was carrying a gun in his hand).
- In view of the foregoing, the Appeals Chamber finds that the statements
of Mr. and Mrs. Osmancevic do not cast a reasonable doubt on Witness EE’s
identification of Josipovic such that they could have been decisive in the
finding that it was Josipovic who participated in the attack.
- The Defence in its reply requests that certain witnesses be heard to corroborate
the content of the statements from Mirsad Osmancevic and his wife Seiba Osmancevic
and in the Motion for Urgent Consideration requests that this be done expeditiously.
In view of the Appeals Chamber’s findings that the statements of Mirsad
Osmancevic and his wife Seiba Osmancevic failed to satisfy the requirements
of Rules 119 and 120, this request does not need to be addressed.
C. The second "new fact" presented by the Defence:
the identity of a policeman, Slavko Topalovic who allegedly resembles Drago
Josipovic and was present at the scene of the crime.
1. Is the identity of Slavko Topalovic a new fact not known
to the moving party during the proceedings?
- The Defence contends that the identity of Slavko Topalovic and his whereabouts
at the time of the attack on Ahmici is a new fact which was not before the
Chamber during either trial or appeal proceedings and not known to the Defence.
The Defence did not know there was a person very much like Drago Josipovic
near the house of Musafer Puscul at the relevant time until after the Appeal
Judgement was rendered.
- The Appeals Chamber accepts that the identity and whereabouts of Slavko
Topalovic may not have been known to the Defence at the time of either the
trial or the appeal . However, there is some confusion over the nature of
the "new fact" which the Defence seeks to present. Annexed to the
Motion for Review are a copy of an application for a change of identity card
for Slavko Topalovic, with photograph affixed, and a copy of the equivalent
document for Josipovic, also with photograph attached. There is also a copy
of what appears to be a salary record for the "1st Operative Unit IV
Combat MP" (explained by the Defence as the first operative company of
the fourth combat unit of the Military Police) dated 4 March 1993, on which
the name Slavko Topalovic appears. The documents submitted to go to proof
of the facts that Slavko Topalovic resembles Josipovic and that he was a member
of the mentioned unit of the Military Police. These were certainly not litigated
at trial, and are therefore new facts. However, in the Motion for Review the
Defence appears to claim as its "new fact" i) that Slavko Topalovic
resembles Josipovic, ii)that he was a member of the unit that participated
in the attack on the house of Musafer Puscul, and iii) that he did indeed
participate in that attack on 16 April 1993. The second and third of those
claims have not been substantiated.
- There is no evidence to show that the first operative company of the fourth
combat unit of the Military Police was the unit which attacked Ahmici. The
Trial Chamber Judgement states only that "the attack was carried out
by military unites of the HVO and members of the Jokers".39
Even if that were the unit which carried out the attack, its membership in
April 1993 can hardly be safely established on the basis of a salary record
for the previous month. And even if it could be established that Slavko Topalovic
were a member of the unit in April 1993, that does not show that he was present
with the unit in Ahmici on April 16th, or that he was involved in the attack
on the house of Musafer Puscul.
- The "new fact" sought to be presented to the Appeals Chamber (which
may or may not be established when the supporting evidence is examined with
regard to the decisive impact of the new fact, below) is therefore that there
is a man named Slavko Topalovic who resembles Josipovic, and that he was a
member of the first operative company of the fourth combat unit of the Military
Police on 4 March 1993.
2. Could Slavko Topalovic have been discovered through the
exercise of due diligence?
- The Appeals Chamber notes that, in support of its contention that Slavko
Topalovic, not Josipovic, was involved in the attack on Musafer Puscul’s
house, the Defence mentions that this features in stories told by persons
in Vitez. In the view of the Appeals Chamber, the Defence could have come
across these stories in the course of its investigations during trial and
appeal if it had exercised due diligence. The Defence has thus failed to show
that Slavko Topalovic could not have been discovered earlier through the exercise
of due diligence.
3. Could the identity of Slavko Topalovic have been a decisive
factor in reaching the decision to convict Josipovic?
- Given that the requirements set out in Rules 119 and 120 of the Rules for
the review of judgements are cumulative, having found that the second of the
criteria set out in Rule 119 (due diligence) has not been met, the Appeals
Chamber notes that it is not necessary to examine whether the alleged new
fact meets the remaining criteria. Nonetheless, in order to address all the
arguments made by the parties , the Appeals Chamber will turn to examine whether
or not the new fact could have been a decisive factor in reaching the decision
to convict Josipovic. The Defence asserts that the identity of Slavko Topalovic
could have been a decisive factor in reaching the decision to convict Josipovic
because it shows that Witness EE had mistaken the former for Josipovic. The
Appeals Chamber has already noted that the Motion for Review is accompanied
by evidence to show that Slavko Topalovic and Josipovic looked alike, and
that Slavko Topalovic was a member of the first operative company of the fourth
combat unit of the Military Police in March 1993. It should be noted that
it is virtually impossible to make any judgement about the similarity between
Josipovic and Slavko Topalovic from the material submitted, as the copied
photographs are of a very poor quality, and clearly no judgement can be made
about the authenticity of the original documents. The Defence explains that
it made copies from files held in the police station in Vitez but is unable
to obtain the originals; it suggests that "[t]he Court could obtain it
with appropriate writ".40 This suggestion
is made in the Defence Reply, but no application is made to the Appeals Chamber
to obtain such an order.
- However, even if the original files could be brought before the court and
their authenticity established, any similarities which might appear between
the two small passport-style photographs would not carry enough weight to
persuade the Appeals Chamber that the identity of Mr. Topalovic could have
been a decisive factor in the decision to convict Josipovic, especially in
view of the lack of evidence to show that Mr. Topalovic was present in Ahmici
on 16 April 1993, or that he participated in the attack on the house of Musafer
Puscul.
- The salary record submitted, with which the Defence seeks to establish this
last circumstance, does not do so, as discussed above. The most it could establish
, if its authenticity were verified, is that Mr. Topalovic was a member of
that particular unit of the Military Police in March 1993. The participation
of that unit in the attack on Ahmici the following month has not been proven
(nor has any evidence been adduced to do so), and neither has Mr. Topalovic’s
membership of the unit at that time. No weight whatsoever can be attributed
to "stories that were told in Vitez, from persons who do not want to
be witnesses and who know the fact [that Slavko Topalovic was at the critical
time in front of Musafer Puscul’s house] based on the town stories".41
- The Defence suggests that the statement given by Witness AT in the Kordic
case to the Prosecution, of which it has received a version with names
redacted,42 corroborates its version of events
. The Defence does not have access to an unredacted version of the statement,
and it cannot therefore confirm whether Slavko Topalovic’s name is mentioned,
but it states nonetheless that "[t]he counsel (sic) is certain that the
name of that policeman is among the names given by the [W]itness AT, and that
he said that he was the person who was in front of the house" of Musafer
Puscul.43
- There are two weaknesses in this argument, whether or not Witness AT’s
statement does name Mr. Topalovic. Firstly, the Appeals Chamber has already
held on appeal that the close relationship between Witness AT and Josipovic
renders Witness AT’s testimony unreliable in determining Josipovic’s
participation in the attack.44 Secondly, the
Defence fails to explain why, in view of this close relationship, it failed
to obtain such a statement from AT at the time of either the trial or the
appeal. Even if Witness AT’s statement did contain the information claimed
by the Defence, then, it would clearly fail both the "due diligence"
and the "decisive effect" requirement for review of the conviction.
It suffers from the same defects as corroborative evidence, and in view of
this and of the Defence’s express concession that the statement is no
longer important to the case now that it has the statement of Mirsad Osmancevic,45
the Appeals Chamber need not address whether protective measures should be
lifted and the content of the statement of AT considered.
- The Prosecution has also pointed out that, throughout his case, Josipovic
has adopted photographs of different individuals to support his defence of
mistaken identity. At trial, Josipovic advanced the argument that another
doppelgänger, Slavko Rajkovic, committed the crimes instead of
him.46 A similar argument was advanced in his
closing argument with respect to another individual.47
The fact that Josipovic has already claimed that two different people committed
the crimes instead of him does undermine the credibility of this argument
somewhat.
- The Appeals Chamber finds that the Defence has manifestly failed to show
with the evidence submitted as to the identity and whereabouts of Slavko Topalovic
that this could have been a decisive factor in reaching the decision to convict
Josipovic .
- Furthermore, the Prosecution requests the Appeals Chamber to consider whether
Rule 46(c) (frivolous motion or motion in abuse of process) should be applied
in relation to the Motion for Review. The Appeals Chamber does not find such
sanction appropriate in this case.
V. DISPOSITION
40. For the foregoing reasons, the Appeals Chamber dismisses:
I. The Motion for Review, and
II. The Motion for Urgent Consideration.
Done in English and French, the English text being authoritative.
___________________
Judge Fausto Pocar
Presiding
Dated this 7 March 2003
At The Hague
The Netherlands.
[Seal of the Tribunal]
1 - Request for Review of the Counsel of the Convicted
Drago Josipovic.
2 - Judgement, 14 January 2000 ("Trial Judgement"),
paras 503 and 859.
3 - Ibid, p. 324.
4 - Appeal Judgement, 23 October 2001 ("Appeal Judgement"),
para 327.
5 - Ibid, para 361.
6 - Ibid, para 333.
7 - Decision on the Motion of the Counsel of Drago Josipovic.
8 - Prosecution’s Response to Request for Review. On 12
September 2002 the Prosecution filed a Corrigendum to Prosecution’s Response
to Request for Review of the Counsel of the Convicted Drago Josipovic. The corrigendum
makes only typographical corrections to the Prosecution’s Response to Request
for Review. References to the Prosecution’s Response are to the corrected
version.
9 - Motion of the Counsel with which he answers to the Prosecution’s
response to the Counsel’s request for the revision of the case.
10 - Motion for Urgent Consideration, 20 January 2003.
11 - Annexed to the Motion for Review.
12 - Motion for Review, para X.
13 - Protocols, 19 June 2002 in Vitez, annexed to the Motion
for Review.
14 - Motion for Review, para X.
15 - Ibid, para XI.
16 - Prosecutor v. Kordic and Cerkez, IT-95-14/2-T.
17 - Motion for Review, para IV.
18 - See the decisions following decisions of the Appeals Chamber:
Prosecutor v Delic, IT-96-21-R-R119, "Decision on Motion for Review",
25 April 2002 ("Delic Review"), para 8; Prosecutor v Jelisic,
IT-95-10-R, "Decision on Motion for Review", 2 May 2002 ("Jelisic
Review"), pp. 2-3; Prosecutor v Josipovic, IT-95-16-R, "Decision on
the Motion of the Counsel of Drago Josipovic" ("Kupreskic Review"),
9 July 2002, pp. 2-3; Prosecutor v Tadic, IT-94-1-R, "Decision on
Motion for Review", 30 July 2002 ("Tadic Review"), para 20; and
of the ICTR Appeals Chamber: Prosecutor v Barayagwiza, ICTR-97-19-AR72,
"Decision on Prosecutor’s Request for Review or Reconsideration",
31 March 2000 ("Barayagwiza Review"), para 41.
19 - Barayagwiza Review, para 15.
20 - Tadic Review, para 27.
21 - Motion for Review, para xiii, p.18.
22 - Prosecution’s Response, para 5.
23 - Para 5.
24 - Paras 22 & 23.
25 - Motion for Review, para XI.
26 - Prosecution’s Response, para 27.
27 - Trial Judgement, paras 491 & 493.
28 - Appeal Brief, pp. 35 et seq.
29 - Defence Reply, para IV.
30 - Delic Review, para 11.
31 - Ibid, para 13.
32 - Defence Reply, para 4.
33 - Para 15.
34 - The statement of Mirsad Osmancevic corroborates the testimony
of Witness EE to the extent that Josipovic was seen after 5:00 am on 16 April
1993 wearing a military camouflage vest and carrying "something" in
his hand. This "something" as identified by Witness EE was a gun.
35 - Appeal Judgement, paras 305-361.
36 - Prosecution’s Response, para 33.
39 - Trial Judgement para 334.
40 - Defence Reply, p. 5.
41 - Motion for Review, para XI.
42 - Order of the President for Disclosure of the Redacted Version
of the Interviews and the Transcript of the Testimony of a Protected Witness,
10 April 2001.
43 - Motion for Review, para 10.
44 - Appeal Judgement, para 346.
45 - "After Mirsad Osmancevic had called, considering the
factual basis for the revision of that case, those non crossed versions are of
no importance to the counsel." Motion for Review, para 10.
46 - Trial Judgement, para 494.
47 - Prosecution’s Response, fn. 61.
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