Case: IT-02-60
IN THE BUREAU
Before:
Judge Theodor Meron, President
Judge Fausto Pocar, Vice-President
Judge Richard May
Judge Daqun Liu
Judge Claude Jorda
Registrar:
Mr Hans Holthuis
Decision of:
27 March 2003
PROSECUTOR
v.
Vidoje BLAGOJEVIC
Dragan OBRENOVIC
Dragan JOKIC
Momir NIKOLIC
___________________________________
DECISION ON BLAGOJEVIC’S MOTION FOR CLARIFICATION
___________________________________
Counsel for the Applicant:
Mr. Michael Karnavas
Counsel for the Prosecutor:
Mr. Peter McCloskey
- Vidoje Blagojevic has filed a motion seeking “clarification” of the Bureau’s
decision denying his motion to disqualify Judges Schomburg, Agius, and Mumba
from hearing his case.1 The Bureau wishes to emphasize
at the outset that it considers it unnecessary to respond to the clarification
motion, which largely seeks to revive claims already rejected in the Bureau’s
denial of Blagojevic’s disqualification motion. Because the Prosecution joins
Blagojevic in seeking clarification of certain points, the Bureau will, in
this case, exercise its discretion to offer the following remarks. But the
parties should be aware that, in the Bureau’s view, the provisions of Rule
46(C) of the Rules apply to proceedings before the Bureau. The Bureau has
chosen not to impose the sanctions authorized there on counsel for Blagojevic
based on the filing of the motion for clarification . But it seriously considered
doing so.
- Blagojevic claims that the Bureau failed to take sufficient account of
the arguments and “evidence” presented in his reply to the Prosecution’s response
to his original disqualification motion.2 As the
Prosecution notes,3 the Bureau’s obligation to
give a reasoned opinion does not entail an obligation to make express reference
to every argument or piece of evidence mentioned by the parties. Having again
reviewed Blagojevic’s earlier reply,4 the Bureau
finds that virtually all of it simply repeats points that were canvassed in
the original motion and the Prosecution’s response. The only argument of any
significance mentioned in the reply that was not discussed in the earlier
filings is the contention that the contrast between the Trial Chamber’s handling
of a guarantee given by the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in another
case and its handling of the guarantee given by Republika Srpska in this case
demonstrates the Trial Chamber’s anti-Serb bias. If this additional piece
of evidence of bias had been taken into account, Blagojevic argues, the Bureau
would have found that the challenged Judges were biased or suffered from an
improper appearance of bias. 5 The Bureau will
now make express the basis for its rejection of Blagojevic’s comparative claim.
First, the text of the decision Blagojevic identifies as a basis of comparison
suggests that, whether rightly or wrongly, the Trial Chamber may well have
understood itself to have been acting on a guarantee not of the Federation
of Bosnia and Herzegovina but of the State of Bosnia-Herzegovina.6
Second, even if Blagojevic is correct that the Trial Chamber understood itself
to have been relying on a guarantee from the Federation, the record of the
Federation’s cooperation with the Tribunal is quite different from the record
of Republika Srpska’s cooperation. That difference in actual practice, not
some alleged anti-Serb bias , suffices to explain any difference in treatment
accorded by the Trial Chamber to the guarantees of the Federation of Bosnia
and Herzegovina, on the one hand, and those of Republika Srpska, on the other.
- Blagojevic seeks to know whether the President or the members of the Bureau
conferred with the challenged Judges once the matter was referred to the Bureau.
He suggests that such consultations are required by Rule 15(B) of the Rules
of Procedure and Evidence (“Rules”) and that their occurrence would be part
of a record necessary for possible further appeal.7
The Bureau finds that the plain terms of Rule 15 of the Rules indicate that
such consultations are not required.
- Blagojevic seeks to know whether the Bureau’s decision denying his original
motion is subject to appeal pursuant to Rule 73 of the Rules.8
The Prosecution supports this aspect of Blagojevic’s motion.9
The Bureau will make two comments on this matter. First, the Bureau finds
no provision in either the Statute or the Rules for appeals from decisions
of the Bureau to the Appeals Chamber. Neither Rule 15 of the Rules, pursuant
to which Blagojevic’s motion was filed, nor Rule 73 of the Rules supplies
a basis for such appeals. Second, because, in the Bureau’s view, Rule 73’s
provisions for interlocutory appeal do not apply to its disqualification decisions,
were Blagojevic to attempt, pursuant to Rule 73 of the Rules, to seek certification
to appeal, the Bureau would not provide such certification.
- The Prosecution, in its response, also seeks clarification whether, even
when the Bureau has decided a disqualification motion pursuant to Rule 15(B)
of the Rules , the party may not bring the same motion before the Trial Chamber
as a motion pursuant to Rule 73 of the Rules.10
The Bureau is not competent to resolve the matter. It is up to the Trial Chamber
to which such a motion is directed to answer the question in the first instance
and, if the answer is in the negative and the issue is certified for interlocutory
appeal, the Appeals Chamber to resolve it.
Done in English and French, the French text being authoritative.
_____________________
Theodor Meron,
President
Done this 27th day of March, 2003
At the Hague,
The Netherlands.
[Seal of the Tribunal]
1 - Vidoje Blagojevic’s Expedited Motion
for Clarification of the Bureau’s Decision on Blagojevic’s Application to Disqualify
the Trial Chamber Pursuant to Rule 15(B) Motion, IT-02-60-PT, 21 March 2003 (“Motion
for Clarification”); Decision on Blagojevic’s Application Pursuant to Rule 15(B),
IT-02-60, 19 March 2003.
2 - Motion for Clarification, preamble, paras. 8-13, esp. para.
12.
3 - Prosecution’s Response to Vidoje Blagojevic’s Expedited
Motion for Clarification, IT-02-60, 26 March 2003 (“Prosecution’s Response”).
4 - Vidoje Blagojevic’s Reply to Prosecution’s Response to Vidoje
Blagojevic’s Motion to Disqualify the Trial Chamber, IT-60-02-PT, 17 March 2003.
5 - Id., at paras. 11-13.
6 - The Prosecutor v. Hadzihasanovic, Alagic and Kubura,
IT-01-47-PT, Decision Granting Provisional Release to Amir Kubura, 19 Dec. 2001.
7 - Motion for Clarification, paras. 9-10.
8 - Id., at para. 11.
9 - Prosecution’s Response, para. 9; see also Vidoje Blagojevic’s
Reply to Prosecution’s Response to Vidoje Blagojevic’s Expedited Motion for Clarification,
IT-02-60-PT, paras. 4-5.
10 - Id., at para. 10.
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