A Defence witness says that indictee Edin Dzeko was not present when Ramiz Delalic hit a Croat prisoner and then fired a bullet to his leg in Jablanica in September 1993.
A Defence witness says that he heard that indictee Edin Dzeko carried his comrades, who were wounded in Trusina village, near Konjic, where crimes against Croats were committed on April 16, 1993.
Testifying at the trial of Edin Dzeko, a Defence witness says that his wife told him that two uniformed persons took Miroslav Soko from his house in Jablanica and that no problems occurred on that occasion.
At the war crimes trial of former Bosnian Army serviceman Edin Dzeko, two fellow Bosniak veterans testified that he never committed murders or abused prisoners.
At the war crimes trial of former Bosnian Army serviceman Edin Dzeko, two fellow Bosniak veterans testified that he never committed murders or abused prisoners.
Defence witnesses say that they remember that Edin Dzeko was present, when two wounded members of Zulfikar Unit with the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina, ABiH, were brought to the wartime hospital in Suhodol, near Hadzici.
A witness for the defence claimed that soldier Edin Dzeko drove two wounded men from the village of Trusina near Konjic to nearby Gostovici, at the time when the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina was carrying out an attack in April 1993.
Testifying in defence of Edin Dzeko, former military policemen say that they did not see the indictee in The Battle of Neretva Museum in Jablanica, where Croat civilians and captured soldiers were held, during their shifts.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Trusina, Konjic, Defence witnesses say that indictee Edin Dzeko helped transport the wounded to a dispensary in April 1993.
The Defence of indictee Edin Dzeko begins presenting evidence by examining witnesses who made a video recording of Trusina village, Konjic municipality, and its surroundings, which was played in the courtroom.