The Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina files a motion requesting the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina to order custody for two out of seven suspects, who were arrested due to a suspicion that they committed crimes in the Kotor-Varos area in the second half of 1992.
Testifying at the trial for genocide in Srebrenica, a State Prosecution witness says that he saw captives being loaded onto a truck in Petkovci, near Zvornik, and heard, later on, that they were shot on a nearby dam.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Visegrad, Defence witnesses say that they did not see indictee Milos Pantelic among the armed soldiers in Kabernik village, when houses were burnt and the Bosniak population taken away.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Trusina, Konjic municipality, court expert in psychiatry Abdulah Kucukalic says that indictee Nedzad Hodzic is currently an insane person.
At the trial for crimes against Serb civilians in Kladanj the Defence of the indictees presents material evidence instead of the examination of a State Prosecution witness.
The Ministry of Justice of Bosnia and Herzegovina proposes revisions of laws, which would enable pardoning of war crime convicts after serving three-fifths of their sentences.
The Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina files a custody order motion for Mirko (son of Spiro) Pekez, Mirko (son of Mile) Pekez and Milorad Savic, who were released from serving their sentence for war crimes, due to a danger that they might flee, influence their accomplices and disturb public order.
A hearing to discuss a State Prosecutions custody order motion for five convicts for genocide in Srebrenica, who were released from prison, has been postponed, because one of the Defence attorneys requested the exemption of judge Azra Miletic.
The first prosecution witness at the trial of Bosnian Serb ex-soldier Aleksandar Cvetkovic, accused of participating in genocide, described how he lived through the executions in 1995.