Oric, the commander of Bosniak forces in Srebrenica, was arrested in Switzerland on suspicion of committing war crimes against Serbs near the eastern Bosnian town in 1992.
A draft resolution condemning the Srebrenica genocide of July 1995 has been sent to the Bosnian parliament, but Bosnian Serb lawmakers are again expected to reject it.
The Netherlands has been pronounced guilty of the killing of Srebrenica residents, whom its soldiers handed over to Serb forces from the Battalions Compound on July 13, 1995.
Not a single person has been brought to justice within a year of the signing of a landmark protocol on cooperation in war crimes cases between Bosnia and Serbia.
Representatives of the Mothers of Srebrenica and Zepa Enclaves Association will request the Chief State Prosecutor of Bosnia and Herzegovina to explain why a proposal for processing three Srebrenica crimes indictees in Serbia has been withdrawn.
The trial is about to start in the Hague of perhaps the most infamous character from the Bosnian war Ratko Mladic, the man charged with the slaughter of thousands of people in Srebrenica.
Haso Hasanovic from Srebrenica saw Ratko Mladic, the then Commander of the Republika Srpska Army, in July 1995. He says that he will never forget the encounter.
Despite the fact that requests made by the Association of Victims of Srebrenica have not been met, a decision has been made to proceed with the burial of about 530 killed people on the 14th anniversary of the genocide.
The Prosecution at the International War Crimes Tribunal has confirmed that it destroyed some materials discovered in the graves of murdered Srebrenica residents.