Testifying at the trial of Ratko Mladic, a protected Prosecution witness says that, in July 1995 he fled from a location near Kladanj, where about twenty Bosniaks from Srebrenica were shot by Republika Srpska Army, VRS members.
Richard Wright, an expert in forensics, says at Ratko Mladic's trial at The Hague, that, during an exhumation of 21 mass graves linked to the fall of Srebrenica he found nothing that would indicate that those killed in battles were buried in them.
Until June this year, the International Commission for the Missing Persons, ICMP, has identified the remains of 6,767 victims of whose death was related to the fall of Srebrenica in July 1995, says ICMP Forensic Director Thomas Parsons, testifying at Ratko Mladic's trial at the Hague.
The trial of Ratko Mladic before the Hague Tribunal continues with testimony by former Republika Srpska Army, VRS, officer Mico Gavric, who said that the VRS captured four Bosniak boys from Srebrenica in the Bratunac surroundings in July 1995.
During the cross-examination at Ratko Mladics trial Prosecution witness Drazen Erdemovic is not able to specify how many Srebrenica Muslims were shot on Branjevo farm, near Zvornik, in July 1995.
Testifying at Ratko Mladics trial at The Hague, witness RM-256 says that he survived the mass murder of Srebrenica Muslims in Kravica village, near Bratunac, in July 1995.
Former Chief of the Intelligence Directorate with the Main Headquarters of the Republika Srpska Army, VRS, Petar Salapura confirms, testifying at Ratko Mladics trial, that most members of that Headquarters knew that Serb forces shot Muslims who had been captured after the occupation of Srebrenica, in July 1995.
Testifying at the trial of Ratko Mladic for genocide and other crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina, a Hague Prosecution witness says that, in mid-July 1995 he knew that Serb soldiers were taking hundreds of Srebrenica Bosniaks from two school buildings in Zvornik, which he guarded, in order to shoot them.
The District Court in Doboj sentences former member of the Croatian Defence Council, HVO, Dervis Cavalic to five-and-a-half years and Esad Cavalic to five years in prison for war crimes against Serb civilians in Derventa.
The District Court in Doboj is due to pronounce a verdict against brothers Esad and Dervis Cavalic, who are charged with war crimes against Serb civilians in Derventa, on May 31.