A Prosecution witness, testifying at the trial of five indictees charged with crimes committed at Koricanske stijene, says that members of the Police Interventions Squad from Prijedor escorted a convoy from which men were separated and shot.
Three days after the flight of Dusan Jankovic, the State Court says that situations like this one point to the weaknesses of legal provisions in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The State Court has requested the issuance of a red Interpol warrant and an arrest warrant against Dusan Jankovic, former policeman from Prijedor, who was sentenced under a first instance verdict to 27 years in prison for his participation in crimes committed at Koricanske stijene.
Witness Velid Blazevic thanks indictee Milorad Skrbic for saving his life in 1992.
Blazevic, testifying for Skrbic's Defence, told the Court he left Prijedor with a convoy of people escorted by Milorad Skrbic in the summer of 1992 but he did not specify the date.
In their closing arguments, indictees Zoran Babic, Milorad Radakovic and Milorad Skrbic called on the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina to acquit them of the charges that they participated in the murder of about 200 men at Koricanske stijene.
Protected Prosecution witness KO18, who survived the shooting at Koricanske stijene in August 1992, recognized indictee Skrbic in the courtroom, saying he was one of the soldiers dressed in blue camouflage uniforms.
The trial of five indictees charged with crimes committed at Koricanske stijene in August 1992 has been postponed after a protected Prosecution witness failed to appear in the courtroom.
The site of an infamous massacre of 200 men in 1992 is to be reexamined. But after 18 years of waiting, relatives fear they may never recover the remains of their loved ones.
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.