AT A GLANCE
- High Commissioner Sadako Ogata, in a briefing to the UN
Security council, calls on asylum countries to keep their borders open to refugees from
Kosovo.
- Macedonian police turn back about 1,000 refugees at one
border crossing amid a government media statement it will no longer accept Kosovars; UNHCR
seeks clarification.
- More than 1,200 people cross the border at Morini into
Albania on a relatively quiet day; UNHCR and local officials concerned about security urge
the immediate relocation of refugees at the Kukes region.
Major Developments
HIGH COMMISSIONERS BRIEFING
High Commissioner Sadako Ogata, addressing the UN Security
Council, called Wednesday on asylum countries to continue to open their doors to
refugees from Kosovo.
"Host countries have kept their borders open for the
most part, in spite of the enormous burden placed upon them by the influx." Mrs.
Ogata said. "In recent weeks, however, we have seen some countries waver in their
commitment to admit refugees to their territory. It is essential that they continue to
keep borders open, facilitate safe access to refugees by humanitarian agencies, and allow
refugees to move immediately to secure, adequately equipped camps."
Mrs. Ogata said denying refugees asylum would expose them
to violence and death. She said UNHCR would continue to mobilize international support in
order to ease the burden on asylum countries.
The High Commissioner also urged countries participating
in a humanitarian evacuation program to increase the pace of movement of refugees from the
FYR of Macedonia to third countries. Of the 85,000 slots offered by European countries so
far, only 28,000 have been filled.
She said UNHCR and its partners are setting up camps away
from insecure border areas, adding that "very soon, unless an early political
solution creates conditions for refugees to return home, we shall have to make plans to
equip refugee camps and public buildings for the bitter Balkan winter."
Mrs. Ogata referred to a "serious threat" posed
by human traffickers who have already started smuggling refugees across the Adriatic into
Italy and the European Union. "Young women, often forced into prostitution, and
children, are frequent victims," she said.
She also said she was extremely worried about the
humanitarian situation in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, where UNHCR was helping more
than 500,000 refugees from Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina before the conflict in
March.
ALBANIA
On a relatively quiet day, 1,269 people crossed the border
at Morini Wednesday. They came by bus, tractor trailers and on foot to the frontier from
three principal areas Djakovica, Mitrovica and Orahovac. Their movements all
appeared to be in the context of "mopping up" operations in those regions rather
than targetted large-scale expulsions.
There were no reports of any new major atrocities or
executions. Several educated people arrived from Prizren including one well-known local
politician, who did not want his name used. This appears to be part of an ongoing campaign
in Prizren, to rid the town of all of its educated elite. The latest arrivals were picked
up at work or at home and given minutes to leave. The rest of their families stayed
behind.
In a separate incident, police at the local Albanian
village of Domaj, three kilometers from the Morini border post reported that the bodies of
three people had washed up ashore there and they believe the bodies were from Kosovo. The
river stretches back into Kosovo. One of the bodies had been virtually decapitated.
A total of 5,040 people left Kukes for areas south on
Wednesday, principally by bus and truck. Only a few days ago, UNHCR had requested that
NATO provide it with enough trucks to move 5,000 people a day.
In meetings yesterday, local and government officials
again stressed to UNHCR and other partners that the security risks continued to heighten
and the government wanted the refugees to move out of the Kukes area as quickly as
possible. This has also been UNHCRs position. In line with that, a delegation
from the United Arab Emirate camp, the largest tented camp in Kukes, was scheduled to fly
by helicopter today to look at a possible alternate site at Hamallaj near Durres and
report back.
UNHCR was asked in Kukes on Wednesday by journalists about
reports it was closing the camps there. UNHCR said that the closure or relocation of camps
was under consideration but no final decision had been taken and that talks had already
been held with officials including the UAE people. It was emphasized however that Kukes
will remain as a major transit point for refugees, and facilities such as medical centers,
collective centers and other services will remain. The seven tented camps hold around
30,000 people of the estimated 100,000 refugees in the Kukes area. The reason emphasis is
being placed on these camps is that they are the most vulnerable to any security threat.
The government, in talks Wednesday, highlighted the
general deterioration of security in the region by reporting that 4,000 Albanians had been
displaced from border villages in the last couple of weeks because of military activty in
the Has region north of Kukes. On Wednesday, six homes were destroyed by shelling in a
village called Letaj and four homes in a village called Dobrune. Several families were
displaced. UNHCR and WFP said they stood ready to help internally displaced persons in
such circumstances if they required assistance.
FYR of MACEDONIA
UNHCR staff saw about 1,000 refugees forcibly returned to
the Yugoslav side of the border Wednesday evening, pushed back first by Macedonian
authorities, then by the Serb side. Once they were back in Yugoslav territory, Serbian
troops could be seen beating and shoving the refugees until they were out of sight.
UNHCR is deeply alarmed at this action and extremely
concerned over the fate of these refugees and possibly thousands more behind them.
Although the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has assured UNHCR
that Macedonias open-door policy remains in effect, as of 10 a.m. today, UNHCR staff
saw no new movements of refugees across the border.
UNHCR is seeking a direct meeting with the Minister of the
Interior to seek an explanation of this incident.
Before the push back, about 2,600 refugees managed to
enter the FYR of Macedonia.
HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
Departures under the humanitarian evacuation program from
the FYR of Macedonia to third countries totaled 1,942 on Wednesday. They included 156 to
Austria, 265 to Canada, 283 to the Netherlands, 151 to Norway, 90 to Slovakia, 160 to
Sweden, 153 to Switzerland, 224 to Turkey and 460 to the United States.
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