Recent decisions by the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina to close war crimes trials to the public in order to protect the private life of the indictees, has faced strong condemnation from victims representatives and NGOs.
Legal experts and judicial officials have criticised the state prosecution for raising indictments for individual war crimes, reducing complex and wide-ranging attacks to a series of more minor incidents.
The State Prosecution files an indictment against Radoman Fundup, also known as Raso, a former member of the Republika Srpska Army, VRS, charging him with crimes against humanity in the Foca area.
The first State Prosecution witness, testifying at the trial for crimes in Batkovic detention camp, says that Gligor Begovic beat him up every day during his two-and-a-half month detention in that facility.
The State Prosecution has charged Ante Golubovic and Jurica Bozic, former members of the Croatian Defence Council, HVO, with having committed murders, rape and mistreatment of Serb civilians in Odzak and Brod in 1992.
The State Prosecution files an indictment against Mirko Vrucinic, a former member of the Crisis Committee in Sanski Most, charging him with crimes committed in that municipality in 1992.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Srebrenik, a State Prosecution witness says that he was detained in a Centre in Rapatnica in the summer of 1992, but he was not beaten or mistreated there.
Serbian nationalist leader Vojislav Seselj asked the international court to sanction its chief prosecutor Serge Brammertz, calling him a political tool of the EU and Croatia.
The State prosecution requested the extension of custody for Andrija Bjelosevic, Milan Savic and Dusan Kuzmanovic who are suspected for crimes in the areas of Teslic and Doboj, and the Defence objected to that request.