At the war crimes trial of former Bosnian Army deputy commander Nihad Bojadzic, a witness said the defendant picked out two female prisoners who were then raped.
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.
The trial of Vehid Subotic, former member of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina, ABiH, who is charged with crimes in Zenica during 1993, is due to begin next week, on Friday, September 6.
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.
At the trial for crimes committed in Jablanica, the prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina tried to prove the presence of defendant Nihad Bojadzic in that town from spring 1993 and his significant role in the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
At the trial of Zehrudin Scuk, who is charged with crimes in Jablanica in July 1993, a court medicine expert says that, following an autopsy of Iva Pavlovics body, she determined that there was a bullet wound on her body.
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.
The trial of Zahrudin Scuk before the Cantonal Court in Mostar begins with reading of the indictment and examination of four Prosecution witnesses, who speak about an attack on Doljani village, near Jablanica.
Testifying at the trial of Nihad Bojadzic, who is charged with crimes in Jablanica, a State Prosecution witness says that he initiated an investigation into the rape of two Croat female detainees in The Battle of Neretva museum in the summer of 1993.
Lawyers for a former Bosnian Army soldier on trial for war crimes have filed a criminal complaint against the countrys defence minister for denying access to wartime military archives.