Gordana Getos-Magdic started a hunger strike in a prison in Zagreb on Thursday, while Mirko Sivic has been on a hunger strike in a prison in Osijek for eight days, Rozac told Hina citing official reports.
Rozac added that he had no knowledge of the reasons for the strike.
According to unofficial sources, Getos-Magdic and Sivic are on a hunger strike because they believe that there are no grounds for their detention.
Getos-Magdic, Sivic and four other persons are suspects in the so-called Sellotape case, which refers to war crimes committed against Serb civilians by the Drava river in Osijek. The two have been in custody for a month and a half. Getos-Magdic was transferred to a prison in Zagreb on October 21.
Spokesman Rozac said that Osijek County Court Investigating Judge Mario Kovac today received medical findings on independent Member of Parliament Branimir Glavas from a team of doctors he appointed to monitor Glavas's condition.
Judge Kovac is soon expected to call medical expert witnesses, Glavas's defence attorneys and the Osijek County Deputy Prosecutor to an investigative hearing to consider in detail the situation and conduct additional interviews, Rozac said.
Glavas's lawyer Marko Dumancic on Monday requested Judge Kovac to suspend the investigation in the Sellotape case, citing as the reason the fact that Zagreb County Court Investigating Judge Zdenko Posavec had temporarily suspended the investigation of Glavas in the so-called Garage case and ordered his release from custody due to his deteriorated condition caused by a 37-day hunger strike.