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CROATIA WILL REACT TO HAGUE TRIBUNAL'S INDICTMENTS SOON - ZUZUL

THE HAGUE, May 6 (Hina) - Croatia will relatively quickly and appropriately define its positions on the parts of the Hague war crimes tribunal's indictments against Croatian generals it feels do not stand, Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul said in The Hague on Thursday after talks with the tribunal's president, Theodor Meron.
THE HAGUE, May 6 (Hina) - Croatia will relatively quickly and appropriately define its positions on the parts of the Hague war crimes tribunal's indictments against Croatian generals it feels do not stand, Foreign Minister Miomir Zuzul said in The Hague on Thursday after talks with the tribunal's president, Theodor Meron.#L# "We will define our positions about the allegations in the indictments and try to refute the parts we think don't stand, but in a way that doesn't diminish the Croatian government's determination to continue cooperating fully," he told reporters and added, "We are on the trail of finding the optimal model". Zuzul said he had thanked Meron and chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte earlier today for their principled positions and positive report on Croatia's cooperation with the tribunal, and voiced hope future reports would be positive as well given Croatia's intention to continue cooperating fully. Zuzul added Croatia expected the report Meron would submit to the Council of Europe tomorrow to be completely positive. Asked how Croatia cooperated in connection with fugitive general Ante Gotovina, the minister said cooperation could not be partial, it either did or did not exist. "The full cooperation refers to all cases. We want the truth to be established and that those proven guilty be punished and those against whom there is no evidence to be released." He declined to speculate whether Croatian Army Military Police commander Mate Lausic and Interior Ministry Special Police commander Zdravko Janic had been summoned for interviews with the tribunal's investigators as suspects, as some media reported today, saying he had not been officially notified about it. He stressed that a number of persons had been summoned to be interviewed as suspects but that this did not indicate they would be indicted. The Hague tribunal's spokesman, Jim Landale, said the talks with Zuzul had been constructive and could point to the good development of Croatia's relations with the tribunal. Asked which form of reaction on Croatia's part to the indictments would be the best, Landale told reporters the reactions could be both verbal, during trial, and written. He said this was available to all accused and that Croatia could voice its positions through the defence attorney even before the trial. Asked about the possibility of transferring some cases to Croatia for prosecution, Landale recalled the Hague tribunal had always encouraged national courts to launch war crimes trials. He added, however, that it was too early to publicly talk about the transfer of concrete cases to Croatian courts, which he said called for the existence of all guarantees, the guaranteed protection of witnesses and victims, and the full transparency and justness of trials. Zuzul's two-day trip to the Netherlands ends on Friday with a meeting with his Dutch counterpart, Foreign Minister Bernard Bot. (Hina) ha

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