The head of the team, Aleksandar Vcev, said in a statement that as of 2000 hours on Tuesday, Glavas was refusing checkups or therapy, was drinking only some water and was refusing to take medication for depression and anxiety he had agreed to take several days ago after a psychiatric treatment.
Vcev said that Glavas stopped taking food and medicines, apart from those mentioned above for a few days, on December 13.
Glavas is suspected of war crimes against civilians committed in 1991. He had been on a 37-hunger strike while in custody in Zagreb, but was released after an investigation against him was suspended and he was transferred to a hospital in the eastern city of Osijek.