The Tribunal would like to have the Defendant Fritzsche back in the witness box and to question him about that.
Did you ask any questions of the Defendant Fritzsche in reference to this matter in your examination of him?
DR. FRITZ: No, Mr. President, I expected—I wanted to say at the conclusion of my case that I had expected a statement on this subject from the representative of the protecting power, the Swiss Ambassador in Berlin. This statement has, however, not yet reached me. I wanted to ask permission to submit it later if it arrives in time.
THE PRESIDENT: Is that another interrogatory or affidavit that you mean?
DR. FRITZ: Yes, it is a statement which deals with this subject.
THE PRESIDENT: Yes.
DR. FRITZ: And if I may be permitted to add this, Mr. President, I also expect a statement from a British radio commentator, Clifton Delmar. That statement has not yet arrived. May I perhaps submit that?
THE PRESIDENT: Certainly, you may. But what the Tribunal is concerned with at the moment is that they think it material that they should know...
DR. FRITZ: Yes, I quite understand, Mr. President.
[The Defendant Fritzsche resumed the stand.]