Prosecution witness Slavko Torbica tells the District Court in Banja Luka that he found the injured Imam Adil Solo in a house in which he saw the indictees.
A defence witness told Ratko Mladic's trial, which has restarted after the Hague Tribunals holiday break, that Muslim extremists were guilty of starting the conflict in Prijedor in 1992.
The Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina returns to the State Prosecution an indictment against 15 people suspected of crimes in Zecovi village, near Prijedor, because it has given it only two days for rendering its decision and decide on the extension of custody.
The trial of Sretko Dragic, Zoran Torbica, Dalibor Jojic and Dragan Gnjatic, who are charged with having beaten and unlawfully arrested an Imam from the Prijedor area in March 1993, has begun before the District Court in Banja Luka.
The Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, BiH, files a motion, requesting three-month extension of custody for 13 out of 15 persons, who are suspected of crimes in Zecovi village, near Prijedor. The Defence considers that there are no legal grounds for the custody extension.
The former fighters and local Serb officials are accused of involvement in the mass killings, rapes and torture of Bosniaks in the village of Zecovi near Prijedor in the summer of 1992.
Testifying at the trial for crimes in Prijedor municipality, a State Prosecution witness says that Dragan Koncar told him and several other persons to come out of a shelter in Kozarusa village on May 26, 1992 and threatened them by saying that they would be killed.