NEW YORK, June 5 (Hina) - The British government is disappointed at Croatia's failure to deliver to the prosecution of International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) several key documents for the trial of General
Ante Gotovina, said the deputy permanent representative of the United Kingdom to the UN Security Council, Philip Parham, on Thursday during the Security Council's discussion on reports by the ICTY President and Chief Prosecutor on the UN tribunal's work and cooperation of countries in the area of the former Yugoslavia with that Hague-based court.
NEW YORK, June 5 (Hina) - The British government is disappointed
at Croatia's failure to deliver to the prosecution of International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) several key documents for the trial
of General Ante Gotovina, said the deputy permanent representative of the
United Kingdom to the UN Security Council, Philip Parham, on Thursday during
the Security Council's discussion on reports by the ICTY President and Chief
Prosecutor on the UN tribunal's work and cooperation of countries in the area
of the former Yugoslavia with that Hague-based court. He said that
his country called on Croatia to continue searching for missing documents and
to investigate what happened with those papers.
Parham said that this was an area which required further work,
assessing that Croatia was cooperating well in other fields.
The US Deputy permanent representative, Rosemary DiCarlo, said that the
United States recognised efforts made by Croatia to cooperate with the
tribunal.
Thomas Mayr-Harting, the permanent representative of Austria, which is
a nonpermanent member of the UN Security Council, praised Croatia's efforts in
this cooperation and expressed hope that these efforts would contribute to the
further strengthening of the constructive dialogue with the ICTY Office of
Prosecutor.