Lawyer Drazen Matijevic said today that a prison physician in Osijek suggested that Glavas, whose health has deteriorated due to a 13-day hunger strike, be transferred to the Zagreb prison.
"The head of the Osijek prison has informed me about this today," Matijevic said, adding that Glavas had also refused to go to the Osijek hospital for medical checkups.
Glavas has been in the Osijek prison since 17 April after the Osijek County Court issued an indictment against him and another six indictees in the so-called Sellotape case.
Five of the other six indictees are also on a hunger strike. The seventh indictee - Gordana Getos-Magdic - has been in the Osijek hospital since 19 March after she underwent a surgery for ileus.
The Zagreb County Court today issued an indictment alleging that Glavas was involved in war crimes in the so-called Garage case.
Glavas was taken into custody in Zagreb in the late autumn of 2006 during an investigation into the Garage case, initially over his possible tampering with witnesses and later on grounds of the gravity of the crimes he was suspected of. He then went on huger strike, as a result of which his health deteriorated. He was released from custody in early December.