AT A GLANCE
- The exodus to FYR of Macedonia and Albania continues with
full force. More than 18,000 refugees crossed into the two countries during the 3-day
period Friday through Sunday.
- The FYR of Macedonia took in 1,260 new arrivals on Friday,
7,700 on Saturday and 5,700 on Sunday.
- In Albania there were 3,650 new arrivals on Friday at the
Morini crossing, 600 on Saturday and 456 on Sunday.
- The total number of refugees flown out of FYR of Macedonia
under the UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program has passed the 60,000 mark. During the
3-day period, a total of 4,237 refugees departed for 14 different countries.
- The estimated number of refugees and displaced people in
the region is 761,000, including 64,000 in Montenegro, 237,000 in the FYR of Macedonia and
438,000 in Albania and 21,500 in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Major Developments
ALBANIA
After a full week during which there were very few new
arrivals at the Morini border crossing, the influx resumed with full force on Friday, May
21 when 3,650 refugees streamed across the border. Most were women and children, coming
from the Suva Reka region.
On Saturday 22 May, another 608 refugees crossed the
border. The first 85 refugees were families, mainly elderly people, women and children.
Then, in mid-afternoon, an entirely different influx took place. Seven batches of men
crossed. The first consisted of middle-aged men, but younger men followed. They were in
pitiful condition: emaciated, exhausted and confused. Many had contusions and other signs
of severe beatings. They embraced each other and wept openly as they reached safety.
From interviews with the men, a consistent, terrifying
story emerged, which corroborates the testimony of a young Kosovar woman given to UNHCR
staff in Sarajevo last week. The men had been part of a large group of Kosovars which was
trying to flee from Kosovska Mitrovica area to Albania in mid-April. On 16 April, which
was the 3rd day of their trek toward the border, they were stopped by Serbian forces at
Gremnik (Grebnik in Serbian), just south of Klina. They were forced to remain for 6 days
at Gremnik and then told to return to Mitrovica. On the way back they were stopped at
Srbica where most of the fighting-age men were separated out from the group. The main
group was ordered to return to Mitrovica.
The men were initially held in a nearby school. Then they
were moved to the prison at Smrekovnica (southeast of Mitrovica town) where they were held
until their unexpected release on 22 May. They said there were 2,000 - 3,000 men in the
prison, but that around 50 men were at one point kept in a police station and then taken
to the front line to be used as human shields.
The men said they had not received any food during the
first 50 hours of their captivity, and thereafter received mostly just bread and water.
One man said they were beaten when they ate. Others spoke of daily interrogations,
beatings and torture. They said that early on Saturday (May 22) some names of prisoners
were read out. They feared they would be taken out and shot. Instead they were taken to
the border area by bus and ordered to walk across.
The men spent their first night of freedom in a UNHCR
tented warehouse in Kukes town. They received food from the UAE team. Several were taken
to clinics.
On Sunday late in the day another 456 refugees crossed the
border, 419 of whom who were men released on Sunday from the Smrekovnica prison near
Kosovska Mitrovica. Many of the men told UNHCR that they had been detained at other places
in Kosovo at various times since late March.
FYR of Macedonia
The influx into the FYR of Macedonia continued over the
weekend with full force, with 1,300 arrivals on Friday, 7,700 on Saturday and 5,700 on
Sunday, placing the FYR of Macedonia border authorities under considerable strain.
On Friday 21 May, ten buses, which reportedly had been
sent from Kosovo Polje, Pristina and Urosevac to replace the daily train, which did not
arrive, carried 800 refugees to Blace. Most travelled from Pristina, but many were
displaced people from other areas who had been living hand-to-mouth in Pristina for the
last month or more. One refugee told UNHCR that police had blocked off several quarters of
Pristina and forced people from their homes, separating young men out from the rest.
Another 460 refugees crossed the "green" border at Malina Mala.
On Saturday 22 May, 7,700 refugees arrived. Most (around
7,000) crossed at Blace after arriving on a train and on buses. Refugees reported that a
large number of displaced people are crammed into a few houses in Slatina village (south
of Urosevac) and confirmed earlier reports that the town of Kamena Glava (Urosevac
municipality) is in the hands of Serbian forces.
Another group of refugees from Gjylekare (Djelekare) near
Vitina reported that on May 15th they had seen six people gunned down by Serbian
militiamen as the village was being "cleansed". The six allegedly included two
women (one over 60 years old), two children aged 5 and 10, and two men, who were shot as
they tried to run from their house.
Also on Saturday another 620 refugees crossed illegally in
the Jazince area after fleeing from different villages in the Kacanik municipality which
reportedly had come under heavy attack by Serbian forces recently. They reported that the
town of Kacanik itself is totally empty and only inhabited by Serbian troops.
On Sunday, another 5,700 refugees arrived at Blace on one
train and 11 buses. The situation in the no-mans-land was tense and chaotic, and
late on Sunday the UNHCR Emergency Co-ordinator was informed by the Foreign Ministry that
the authorities wanted the new arrivals transferred directly to Albania. Following
intensive negotiations which continued into the early hours of the morning, in the course
of which UNHCR insisted that transfers of refugees to other countries must be strictly
voluntary, it finally was agreed at around 2 a.m. that the refugees would be transferred
into camps in the FYR of Macedonia. Several hundred people who had already been loaded on
to buses for Albania were then taken to the Stenkovec camp and the remaining several
thousand refugees were admitted to the holding centre at Blace.
Montenegro
UNHCR staff in Rozaje report few new arrivals in recent
days. There are indications that the border is sealed on both sides by the Yugoslav
military, which would make passage for displaced people difficult. There were just 10 new
arrivals on 19 May and 18 persons crossed on 20 May. Around 250 refugees arrived on 21-22
May, coming from Rakos village east of Istok. Their travel along the Mitrovica-to-Rozaje
road was apparently assured by the military. No information is available yet concerning
any arrivals on 23 May.
There has been no significant change in the stand-off over
control of Montenegros external borders, with Yugoslav army checkpoints still set up
on roads near the border crossings with Croatia and Albania.
Transfer of displaced people from the factories being used
as collective centers in Rozaje to camps in Ulcinj continues. On Friday 21 May UNHCR
escorted two busloads of Kosovars (105 persons) to tented sites in Ulcinj. Movements will
resume today.
UNHCR has publicized the fact that it is not involved in
an apparent scam which has been detected in Ulcinj, whereby displaced people are offered
transportation to Sarajevo via Podgorica for 2,000 DM, with a promise of onward movement
from Sarajevo to third countries. The perpetrators of this scam have been presenting it as
a UNHCR program, which it is not.
UNHCR staff received the U.N. inter-agency mission, which
arrived in Rozaje over the weekend. Meetings with the Montenegrin government are scheduled
for today.
UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian evacuation program
Departures during the 3-day period 21-23 May totalled
4,237.
On Friday 21 May, there were 2,367 departures to 11
different countries (Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Spain,
Sweden, the United Kingdom and the USA).
On Saturday 22 May, departures fell to their lowest level
since May 3rd. Just 866 refugees left Skopje, bound for Austria, Canada, the Netherlands
and Norway.
On Sunday 23 May there were 994 departures, to Denmark,
Italy, Norway, Portugal and Slovenia.
To date, just over 60,000 refugees have left the FYR of
Macedonia for humanitarian evacuation to other countries.
|
Table 1: Daily Population
Estimates (figures refer to displacement since March 1998)
Refugees/Displaced
in: |
Remarks |
Total
|
Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia
(Republic of Montenegro) |
|
No information on new arrivals |
|
64,000
|
Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia
(Republic of Serbia) |
|
No figures for displacement within Kosovo
available |
|
Yugoslav government report of 60,000 in
Serbia unconfirmed |
|
na
|
Former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia |
|
Camp population: 87,160 (source: UNHCR
Skopje); arrivals 23 May: ca. 5,750; departures by air 23 May: 994 (see Table 2 below) |
|
Registered host family population: 120,432
(source: Macedonian Red Cross) |
|
Unregistered elsewhere: 30,000 (source:
government) |
|
237,600
|
Albania |
|
Arrivals from Kosovo 23 May: ca. 460 |
|
438,000
|
Bosnia-Herzegovina |
|
Total comprises Kosovar refugees only |
|
Also resulting from the Kosovo conflict:
21,000 from Sandzak, 30,750 Serb, Croatians and Montenegrins from FRY (source: government) |
|
21,500
|
TOTAL |
|
761,100
|
Table 2: Humanitarian evacuations of Kosovar
refugees
from the FYR of Macedonia from 5 April through 23 May 1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
Receiving
Country |
Arrivals |
23
May |
Total
|
Australia |
|
1,627 |
Austria |
|
3,388 |
Belgium |
|
1,223 |
Canada |
|
4,919 |
Croatia |
|
188 |
Czech Republic |
|
824 |
Denmark |
167 |
1,513 |
Finland |
|
958 |
France |
|
3,717 |
Germany |
|
12,627 |
Iceland |
|
70 |
Ireland |
|
449 |
Israel |
|
106 |
Italy |
409 |
3,232 |
Netherlands |
|
2,444 |
Norway |
142 |
4,792 |
Poland |
|
1,049 |
Portugal |
150 |
808 |
Romania |
|
41 |
Slovakia |
|
90 |
Slovenia |
126 |
483 |
Spain |
|
900 |
Sweden |
|
1,978 |
Switzerland |
|
816 |
Turkey |
|
7,475 |
United Kingdom |
|
1,303 |
United States |
|
3,851 |
TOTAL |
994 |
60,871 |
This document is intended for public information
purposes only. It is not an official UN document. |