MOSTAR/SARAJEVO, April 22 (Hina) - A former member of Bosnia-Herzegovina's collective presidency, Ante Jelavic, who has been detained in the Kula prison (outside Sarajevo) for three months, on Thursday went on hunger strike protesting
against the failure of competent bodies to respect a decision by the Constitutional Court on temporary suspension of criminal proceedings against him in the case of Hercegovacka Banka, Jelavic's lawyer Josip Muselimovic told Hina today.
MOSTAR/SARAJEVO, April 22 (Hina) - A former member of
Bosnia-Herzegovina's collective presidency, Ante Jelavic, who has been
detained in the Kula prison (outside Sarajevo) for three months, on
Thursday went on hunger strike protesting against the failure of
competent bodies to respect a decision by the Constitutional Court on
temporary suspension of criminal proceedings against him in the case
of Hercegovacka Banka, Jelavic's lawyer Josip Muselimovic told Hina
today.#L#
Muselimovic added that the Court on 19 April also ruled that criminal
proceedings against the second suspect in this case, a former defence
minister, Miroslav Prce, should also be temporarily suspended.
Jelavic and Prce, who are accused of involvement in financial
wrongdoings in the Mostar-based bank, have been in custody in the Kula
prison.
"The decision of the Constitutional Court is binding, which means that
Jelavic and Prce can no longer be kept in custody and must be
released," the lawyer said.
Muselimovic said that the temporary suspension of the investigation
would be in force until Bosnia's Constitutional Court made a final
ruling on whether the law on immunity of the Bosnian Federation was in
compliance with the constitution.
The Constitutional Court last Tuesday stated that the decision on
temporary suspension referred to an investigation which was being
conducted before the Sarajevo Canton Court. This court launched an
investigation against Jelavic and other senior officials of the
Croatian Democratic Union of BiH at the time when there was still no
state court which later took over the case.
The president of the Court of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Martin Raguz,
described Muselimovic's statements as arbitrary.
"The Court's Penal Council is yet to see to which file the
Constitutional Court's decision refers, as two processes are being
conducted against Jelavic," Raguz was quoted by a local paper in Banja
Luka.
(Hina) ms