Former Bosnian Serb Army serviceman Oliver Krsmanovic was sentenced to 18 years in prison for crimes against humanity including the killings and forced disappearances of Bosniaks in Visegrad in 1992.
A protected witness testifying at the Mile Puljic trial said shed heard from another witness in the trial that her husband and brother-in-law had been abducted.
The Bosnian state court is expected to make a decision regarding the presentation of evidence in the Aleksandar Cvetkovic trial. The decision would bring an end to the presentation of evidence and would lead to the state prosecutions closing statement.
Dragan Maksimovic failed to appear at a plea hearing before the Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Maksimovic has been charged with committing war crimes in the Kalesija area in the summer of 1992.
Defense attorney Kenan Ademovic requested that his client, Jozo Djojic, be medically examined in order to assess whether he is fully aware of the charges laid against him.
While being cross-examined at the trial for crimes on Igman, a military expert repeats that indictee Nedzad Hodzic was an ordinary soldier in 1993 and that he could not issue orders or make decisions concerning the taking of prisoners to Mount Igman.
A protected witness statement is read at the trial of Oliver Krsmanovic, who is charged with crimes in Visegrad. In that statement the witness said that the indictee and Milan Lukic shot at civilians.
First defence witnesses told the trial for genocide in Srebrenica that defendant Aleksandar Cvetkovic was a driver and that he did not participate in sabotage.