Chief Hague Prosecutor Serge Brammertz will pay a technical visit to Belgrade in the second half of February. He will discuss with Serbian authorities the operational aspects of Serbia’s cooperation with the Hague, member of the Prosecutor’s Immediate Office Frederick Swinnen told Tanjug on Wednesday.
Posts Tagged ‘Serge Brammertz’
“Too early to comment on Brammertz’s reportâ€
“It is too early and somewhat pointless to comment on Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz’s next report.”
“It is difficult to say what is going to happen in June, because it is still far away,†Head of Serbia’s Office for Cooperation with the Hague Tribunal DuÅ¡an Ignjatović told Tanjug.
“We fulfill all Hague recommendationsâ€
Doubts regarding Serbia’s cooperation with the Hague Tribunal will be removed in February, said Deputy War Crimes Prosecutor Bruno Vekarić.
“The War Crimes Prosecution is in constant contact with the Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz,†he pointed out.
Brammertz: Next report will be negative
Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz has announced that his next report on Serbia’s cooperation will be negative.
“That will happen if Serbia does not improve,†daily Politika has learned from the sources in Brussels.
Äelić: Secret services not doing enough
Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz’s stand is that Serbian secret services did not do enough to arrest the fugitives, Deputy PM Božidar Äelić said.
“Without ascertainment of full cooperation with The Hague there will be no beginning of negotiations on Serbia’s EU membership,†he told daily Blic.
Serbia to be criticized until Hague arrests
Rasim Ljajić said on Wednesday that Hague Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz “confirmed he wuold continue to criticize Serbia”.
This happened in his address to the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Policy, said the Ljajić, who heads Serbia’s National Council for Cooperation with the Hague.
“Mladić is alive, and he’s in Serbia”
The key to arrest of Ratko Mladić is in Belgrade, thinks Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz.
He also said that he did not wish to “play a role of somebody who is slowing down†Serbia’s progress toward the EU.
“Fugitives not protected by helpers”
A military-political commentator for Politika daily says that Serbia’s intelligence agencies are responsible for not arresting Mladić and Hadžić. Ljubodrag Stojadinović told B92 that Chief Hague Prosecutor Serge Brammertz’s report was a balance between the pressure on Serbia to fulfill its obligations toward the Hague Tribunal and a stimulation to finally get the job done.
Hague prosecutor: Serbia holds key
Chief Hague Prosecutor Serge Brammertz has presented his new report on Serbia’s cooperation to the United Nations Security Council in New York. “Serbia holds the key to arresting Mladić and Hadžić. They must be taken to justice if all relevant institutions do their job properly,” he said.
Hague report “objective, mostly positive”
Government Hague cooperation office chief Dušan Ignjatović says the new report of Hague Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz is objective and mainly positive.
“At this point it was not possible for Serbia to get a better report considering that the two remaining Hague fugitives are not arrested yet,” Ignjatović told RTS in Belgrade late on Tuesday.
“Mladić could have been arrested in 2006″
War Crimes Prosecutor Vladimir VukÄević said Friday that he believed that an opportunity to arrest Ratko Mladić was missed in 2006.
He added that Hague Tribunal Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz shared his opinion and that the persons responsible would be identified.
“Key to Mladić case is in Belgrade”
Chief Hague Prosecutor Serge Brammertz says the key to resolving the case of the remaining two Hague fugitives is in Serbia. “Mladić is either very skillful in hiding or the search for him is not proceeding well, he said on Thursday in The Hague, addressing a group of visiting journalists from Serbia.
Brammmertz sends report to UNSC
The chief prosecutor of the Hague Tribunal, Serge Brammertz, sent a regular report to the UN Security Council on Wednesday.
Beta news agency reported that in it, he evaluated Serbia’s cooperation in the search for the remaining war crimes suspects – Ratko Mladić and Goran Hadžić.
“Brammertz report expected to be fair”
Hague cooperation action team coordinator Vladimir VukÄević says he expects Serge Brammertz’s report to be “fair”. Hague Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz’s report to the UN Security Council will be officially presented on December 6.
“Brammertz report expected to be fair”
Hague cooperation action team coordinator Vladimir VukÄević says he expects Serge Brammertz’s report to be “fair”. Hague Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz’s report to the UN Security Council will be officially presented on December 6.
Deputy prosecutor: Mladić arrest moral obligation
Deputy War Crimes Prosecutor Bruno Vekarić Hague Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz will base his report on whether two remaining indictees have been arrested.
The report is important for Serbia’s application for accession in the European Union, but the arrest of Mladić, who is indicted for the murder of 8,000 people and who costs Serbia EUR 160 per capita, is also a moral obligation, Vekarić told B92 in Belgrade on Tuesday.
Serbian prosecutor expects positive report
Serbian war crimes prosecutor Vladimir VukÄević expressed expectation that Serge Brammertz’s report on Serbia’s cooperation will be positive. The chief Hague prosecutor was in Belgrade on Monday, and his report is due before the UN Security Council in December.
Prosecutor: Fugitives believed to be in Serbia
Chief Hague Prosecutor Serge Brammertz is in Belgrade this Monday as he prepares to submit his regular report to the UN General Council. The report will assess Serbia’s cooperation with the Hague Tribunal.
Brammertz calls for Mladić’s arrest
Hague Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz called for increased efforts to apprehend war crimes fugitive Ratko Mladić and turn him over to the international court. He made the statement in Sarajevo on Monday after meeting with Valentin Inzko, high representative in Bosnia-Herzegovina, who informed him about political developments in the country.



