This post is also available in: Bosnian
The witness, Ferid Spahic, said that the men in the village of Iseric Brdo were separated from the convoy which had set off from Visegrad and were put on a bus.
He added that they had set off from Rogatica towards the Paklenik pit. Spahic said that he saw Milisavljevic for the first time on June 15, 1992, in Rogatica.
He said that one Mico Gavrilovic and another man boarded the bus in Rogatica, and that Milisavljevic sat down on the hood. He recognised him, he said, by the mole on his right cheek, which distinguished him from his brother Nenad.
Spahic, who started his testimony on December 4, said that he saw Milisavljevic and another three men by the Paklenik pit, where he and others were ordered to leave the bus.
We went there two by two, eyes to the ground. When we stopped, I looked up and saw Predrag Milisavljevic, a guy in the bulletproof vest, Slavisa Vukojcic and another man. Slavisa and the other guy said that the first ten men approach the pit. Silence. I turned towards Predrag and the guy next to him. Predrag fired short bursts of gunfire and these two vanished, the witness said.
The witness said that then he looked towards the pit again and saw that the ten men were gone, but he did not hear any shots being fired. Soon afterwards he managed to escape.
Spahic could not specify what was Milisavljevic wearing, whom he has known since his school days in Visegrad, although earlier he have two conflicting statements that he was in a dark camouflage uniform and civilian clothing.
The Prosecution charged Milisavljevic and Milos Pantelic with taking part in the murder of several dozen Bosniaks at the Paklenik pit. The two of them, together with Ljubomir Tasic, are also charged with the forced expulsion of more than 500 Bosniak civilians from Visegrad.
Speaking about the defendant Tasic, the witness reiterated that he talked with him in a tavern about the departure of Bosniaks from the village of Bosanska Jagodina near Visegrad.
There were people in the tavern, but we waied 20 minutes for Ljupko to come, and when he came, we started talking about the convoy, said the witness.
He added that the convoy set off from the village without escort on June 14, 1992, and stopped in front of the hotel in Visegrad, with other buses being already there.
He said that he did not notice Tasic issuing any orders, and that he had not seen him since the convoy had set off from Visegrad.
The new witness for the prosecution would be interrogated at the trial scheduled for December 18.