After the meeting in the government's offices behind the closed doors, Kosor told the national broadcasting corporation (HTV) that the talks had focused on the logs, that the government had compiled a report on the matter and that it expected the ICTY prosecution to make a positive assessment on the issue.
In the so-called administrative inquiry which has been conducted primarily in the defence ministry, the government has made additional efforts to find documents on which the prosecution insists and to establish what has happened with them. We have prepared the report and I hope that the ICTY chief prosecutor's marks will be positive in this sense, Kosor told the HTV.
Brammertz arrived in Zagreb on Monday for a working visit to Croatia until 27 May. He is expected to submit a regular report to the United Nations' Security Council in June.
During his stay in Croatia, he will also attend a regional conference of war crimes prosecutors from the region who will gather for a conference on the Croatian archipelago of Brijuni.