Judges at the Hague examined the second prosecution witness to testify about the mass grave found at the Tomasica mine near Prijedor at the trial of Ratko Mladic, in a closed hearing.
The Bosnian state court rejected a proposal to impose custody measures on Milorad Radakovic and Goran Pejic, both suspected of participating in war crimes in the Prijedor area in 1992.
The Hague Tribunals prosecution has reopened evidence proceedings against Ratko Mladic in order to present evidence on a mass grave in the Tomasica mine near Prijedor, where the bodies of more than 400 Bosniaks from Prijedor were found.
The State Investigation and Protection Agency arrested Milorad Radakovic and Goran Pejic on suspicion of participating in war crimes in the Prijedor area in 1992.
Testifying at the trial of Mirko Vrucinic, a Bosnian state prosecution witness said he was forced to identify killed civilians during his detention in a sports hall in Sanski Most.
Testifying at the trial of Mitar Vlasenko, Rade Vlasenko and Drago Koncar, a state prosecution witness said he used to see the defendants in uniform during the war.
A Bosnian state prosecution witness testifying at the trial of three former members of the Bosnian Serb Army said he heard that his cousin had been killed after being taken out of the Trnopolje detention camp in 1992.
The White Armband Day will be commemorated on Sunday, May 31, with a walk through the streets of Prijedor and the laying roses in the main square with the names of killed children in the city.
In the summer of 1992, the newspaper Kozarski Vjesnik published a story stating that a doctor from Prijedor, Osman Mahmuljin, knowingly gave bad medical treatment to a colleague, Zivko Dukic, who had suffered a heart attack.