A Defence witness says at the trial for crimes at Koricanske stijene, that indictee Marinko Ljepoja was with him on August 21, 1992, after a bus, which transported civilians from Prijedor to Travnik, broke down.
British journalist Ed Vulliamy says at the trial of Radovan Karadzic, that prisoners, whom he saw in Omarska detention camp in August 1992, looked horrified, describing prisoners, who were held in Trnopolje detention camp, as skeletons.
The continuation of the trial for crimes committed at Koricanske stijene on August 21, 1992 has been postponed until April 13 because witnesses who were due to testify in defence of indictee Sasa Zecevic failed to appear in courtroom.
Testifying in defence of indictees Sasa Zecevic and Petar Civcic, a witness says he found out that members of the Interventions Squad with the Public Safety Station in Prijedor shot most of the people in the convoy they escorted at Koricanske stijene.
A Prosecution witness, who survived the shooting at Koricanske stijene, testifies at the trial of five indictees charged with the crime and says policemen from Prijedor organised the taking away, separation and shooting of men capable of military service on Mount Vlasic.
At the trial of five indictees charged with the murder of Prijedor residents committed at Koricanske stijene, the Prosecution of Bosnia and Herzegovina read a statement given by a survivor of the shooting, who was not able to testify at the trial due to illness.
Asima Memics son, Asmir, boarded a bus from Prijedor to Travniik as part of an exchange in July 1992. He never arrived, and only a single limb has ever been recovered.
Several hundred former detainees from Prijedor and their families have gathered in Omarska to commemorate August 6th, the day when the disassembly of this camp began 18 years ago.
Legislation needed to curb the construction of hate-filled monuments, which deny known facts about the conflict and stir up ethnic tension rather than honouring innocent victims.
Momcilo Mandic told the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, ICTY, that paramilitary formations were not controlled by the Serbian army or politicians in 1992, adding that the central government of Republika Srpska, RS, was not in charge of municipal crisis committees.