The spokesman for the Osijek County Court, Miroslav Rozac, said on Monday that the DNA analysis forensics had carried out in Zagreb, where the bodies of a man and a woman had been transferred after the exhumation, showed that the two exhumed persons are not the persons assumed to have been buried there.
The bodies exhumed on 22 December are not on the list of persons who went missing in the war and nobody has ever reported their disappearance.
In the case labelled by the media as the Sellotape case, seven people, including independent member of parliament Branimir Glavas, are suspected of having been involved in war crimes against several Serb civilians by the Drava River.
Glavas, who was treated in a hospital in Osijek due to the consequences of his 36-day hunger strike in late 2006, was released from hospital on Saturday to continue with recuperation at home.
His lawyer Marko Dumancic told the press on Monday that his client was staying in his flat in Osijek where he was recovering and preparing for the continuation of criminal proceedings.