Testifying for the prosecution at the Ratko Mladic trial, forensic expert Ian Hanson said 371 sets of mortal remains were exhumed from the biggest mass grave in the Tomasica mine near Prijedor.
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 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 trial of Ratko Mladic will resume at the end of June, after a one month recess. When the trial resumes, Hague prosecutors will be allowed to introduce evidence about the Tomasica mass grave near Prijedor at the trial.
A former Bosnian Serb Army artillery officer told Ratko Mladics trial that he never targeted civilians during the 1992-95 siege of Sarajevo and was never ordered to terrorise the citys population.
Velo Pajic, the former communications officer at the main headquarters of the Bosnian Serb Army, testified in defense of Ratko Mladic at the Hague Tribunal.
A defence witness told Ratko Mladics trial in The Hague that the Bosnian Serb military chief had no control over detention camps for Bosniaks and Croats near Prijedor in the summer of 1992.
A defence witness at Ratko Mladics trial said that that during the war, the Bosnian Serb Armys main headquarters gave orders to treat prisoners of war and civilians humanely.
A defense witness testifying at the Ratko Mladic trial said he was wounded while working as an ambulance driver during a Bosnian Army attack on Prijedor in May 1992.
On the second day of his testimony at Ratko Mladics trial, the former deputy military prosecutor in Banja Luka Slobodan Radulj could not list a single case where war crimes against non-Serbs were prosecuted during the war.