On 17 March 2001, the office of then prime minister of Serbia, Zoran Djindjic, received a report from the headquarters of Yugoslav Army about the 30th personnel center. Among other things the report said that this center of Yugoslav was founded on 10 November 1993 by executive order of Slobodan Milosevic, then president of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
The center was consisted of members of Yugoslav Army who were allocated to the territory of Republika Srpska. The reports confirmed their status until 2001 i.e. it verifies that all members of the personnel center were paid by Milosevic's regime, during the war of aggression on BiH, as well as during 6 years after the war.
This document is one in a series of documents that Serbia submitted 10 years ago to the Hague prosecutors under the condition that some parts are concealed or not used at all.
The communique sent to Djindjic by then head of the Yugoslav Army HQ, General Nebojsa Pavkovic proposed removing 1,841 professional member of the 30the personnel center from the budget of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, after which the government of Republika Srpska would continue to support them financially.
In addition, it was emphasized that monthly income of the personnel center members is larger than those of members of Yugoslav Army.
The list of 1841 members of the 30th personnel center paid by Serbia then headed by Vojislav Kostunica, also included The Hague convict, Ratko Mladic, general Momir Talic indicted in 1999 by The Hague prosecutors for crimes in BiH (deceased in 2003), Radislav Krsic sentenced to 35 years in prison for Srebrenica genocide, Novak Djukic sentenced to 20 years for the crime in Tuzla...
Also, there were many who received their salaries from the budget of Serbia until 2001 as the members of the 30th personnel center of Yugoslav Army. Today, they are high-rank officers in BiH Armed Forces, police and intelligence agencies at the state level and in the RS.