AT A GLANCE
- On Thursday, 7,500 refugees arrived in the FYR of Macedonia
and 1,800 refugees crossed into Albania from Kosovo.
- The situation in camps in the FYR of Macedonia is critical.
UNHCR appeals to European countries to speed up evacuations.
- The estimated total numbers of refugees in the region are
373,400 in Albania and 160,700 in the FYR of Macedonia. More than 62,400 displaced
Kosovars remain in Montenegro.
MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS
ALBANIA
By late afternoon Thursday, an estimated 1,800 people had
crossed into Albania through the Morini border crossing. The majority were from Prizren, a
mix of original residents and others who had fled from different areas in Kosovo. A doctor
and six nurses were among the new arrivals. They said they were at work yesterday morning
at the Prizren hospital when police arrested them, bundled them into a vehicle and drove
them to the Albanian border. They did not have time to tell their families they were being
forced into exile or to pack anything. It took one hour from the time they were working
normally until they became refugees in Albania.
Another large group said they were from Obilic, near
Pristina. They reported that they had been rounded up earlier in the day and told to get
on a bus to Albania. They said that the entire area of Obilic was now deserted of people.
The Government of Albania and UNHCR have continued to
pursue the transfer of refugees from the north of the country, but are concerned that
insufficient numbers are moving south. The "go-and-see" helicopter visits to
areas in the south appear to be having some positive effect, as refugees are better
informed of conditions in other areas. Almost 5,000 refugees left Kukes for the south on
Thursday. Still, more than 100,000 refugees remain in the northern districts of Kukes and
Has.
There are reports of a deteriorating security situation in
the Bajram Curri area, with little or no effective police presence in the northern town.
Food left by relief helicopters on the main football field is said to have been looted.
The OSCE has initiated discussions with the Government of Albania on what can be done to
improve the situation.
UNHCR reports that to date, more than 30,000 refugees have
crossed from Montenegro into Albania through the Hani i Hotit (Bozaj) border. The majority
have found shelter in the Shkodra prefecture. Around 3,300 remain in a tobacco factory,
where conditions are said to be poor. MSF and the Spanish NGO MPDL are cooperating to
rehabilitate the building and improve the distribution of food and relief items. MSF
installed hot and cold showers and trench toilets. UNHCR has dispatched blankets,
mattresses, sanitary supplies and jerry cans to the site.
FYR of MACEDONIA
Refugees flooded into the FYR of Macedonia on Thursday,
with new arrivals outpacing departures by over 500%. Around 7,500 new arrivals were
counted by midnight. The majority (around 6,500) crossed at Blace. The existing camps
including the first segment of the new camp at Cegrane are full to capacity
and the situation is worsening rapidly. UNHCR calls on European governments to do their
utmost to accelerate immediately the evacuation of refugees from these camps. Of the
around 85,000 places offered by European countries for evacuation of refugees from the FYR
of Macedonia, only around 25,000 have been filled to date. The need to take advantage of
all of these places is now urgent.
Thursdays new arrivals in the FYR of Macedonia came
by bus from Urosevac and by train from Kosovo Polje. Groups also arrived from Presevo in
Serbia. Many appeared traumatized.
Around 500 of the new arrivals crossed at Jazince, another
130 at Tabanovce and 250 through the mountains to Straza. A UNHCR team reached the
mountain village of Runice yesterday, near the hamlet of Straza which straddles the border
with Kosovo. They reported that a group of several hundred refugees had crossed the border
and told them that another 1,000 were behind them still trying to cross. The refugees said
they were from Presevo, Gnjilane and Pristina. Local villagers took the new arrivals into
their homes and UNHCR dispatched emergency assistance to the area. A Médecins du Monde
team was on site and attended to those in need of medical care, including one man with
kidney problems.
New refugee sites are still urgently needed. Although the
new camp at Cegrane has already been partly completed, and the two remaining segments of
the camp are due to be completed in the coming days, at present arrival rates the camp
will be full within days.
MONTENEGRO
Over the past two days, only 200-250 new arrivals have
crossed into Montenegro. Around 100 displaced Kosovars arrived on Thursday from the Istok
municipality. Others entered Montenegro via Draga in Serbia, where they said they had been
detained initially by military police, but later released. They said eight people from
their group were beaten before crossing into Montenegro at Jablica. A smaller group of
young men crossed over the difficult mountain pass directly to Rozaje. On arrival in the
small village of Bac near the border, they said four persons from their group were
detained and remain unaccounted for.
Displaced Kosovars continue to leave Montenegro,
especially from Ulcinj, to cross into Albania. The current departure rate is 500-600
daily. Other groups have reportedly departed for Sarajevo in the past several days.
In Ulcinj, UNHCR has distributed kitchen sets to the camps
and collective centers where displaced Kosovars are being housed. Soup kitchens have been
established by several NGOs to serve those staying in mosques, collective centers and in
private accommodation in the town. Caritas has distributed pasta, chocolate and family
parcels to camps and displaced living in private accommodation.
HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
On Thursday 29 April, only 1,170 refugees were evacuated
on 12 flights to Austria, Belgium, France, Norway, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom.
This was well below UNHCRs immediate target of 2,000 daily. Flights to Belgium, the
Czech Republic, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden are scheduled for
today. Notwithstanding this level of activity, the departure processing is going too
slowly and UNHCR asks all governments to keep formalities to an absolute minimum and to
speed-up the pace of evacuations with immediate effect.
UNHCR is also urging refugees in FYR of Macedonia to take
advantage of the generous offer of Turkey to receive 20,000 Kosovars under the
humanitarian evacuation scheme. To date, nearly 6,000 refugees have been flown to Turkey,
where most are being well looked after in the Kirkaleri camp. Some have gone to stay with
relatives in Turkey. In addition to those who have arrived under the evacuation programme,
more than 7,000 Kosovars have travelled spontaneously to Turkey, bringing to 13,000 the
number who had found safety there as of Thursday 29 April.
|
Table 1: Daily Population
Estimates (figures refer to displacement since March 1998)
Refugees/Displaced in: |
Remarks |
Total
|
Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia
(Republic of Montenegro) |
|
New arrivals 28/9 April: 200 |
|
Departures to Albania 28 April: 600 |
|
62,400 |
Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia
(Republic of Serbia) |
|
No figures for displacement within Kosovo
available |
|
Yugoslav government report of 50,000 in
Serbia unconfirmed |
|
na |
Former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia |
|
Arrivals 29 April: 7,500 |
|
Departures 29 April: ca. 1,200 by air (see
Table 2 below) |
|
160,700 |
Albania |
|
Arrivals from Kosovo 29 April: ca. 1,800 |
|
Arrivals from Montenegro 28 April: 600 |
|
373,400 |
Bosnia-Herzegovina |
|
Total comprises Kosovar refugees only |
|
Also 20,000 arrivals from Sandzak and 10,500
Serbs and Montenegrins |
|
15,000 |
TOTAL |
|
611,500
|
Table 2: Humanitarian evacuations of Kosovar
refugees
from the FYR of Macedonia from 5 April through 29 April
1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
Receiving Country |
Arrivals
|
29
April |
Total
|
Austria |
165 |
976 |
Belgium |
172 |
848 |
Croatia * |
--- |
188 |
Czech Republic |
--- |
115 |
Finland |
--- |
481 |
France |
145 |
1,922 |
Germany |
--- |
9,974 |
Iceland |
--- |
23 |
Israel |
--- |
106 |
Netherlands |
--- |
1,011 |
Norway |
156 |
1,888 |
Poland |
--- |
635 |
Spain |
105 |
208 |
Sweden |
--- |
444 |
Switzerland |
--- |
33 |
Turkey ** |
258 |
5,665 |
United Kingdom |
169 |
330 |
TOTAL *** |
1,170 |
24,847 |
* |
Croatia: of whom 88
bilaterally without UNHCR/IOM involvement |
** |
Turkey: of whom 1,980
without UNHCR/IOM involvement |
*** |
Total: of whom 2,068
without UNHCR/IOM involvement |
This document is intended for public information
purposes only. It is not an official UN document.
|