AT A GLANCE
- Around 10,000 Kosovars flee into Albania and the FYR of
Macedonia on 24 May. The figure includes nearly 1,500 refugees who went to Albania and
more than 8,500 to the FYR of Macedonia.
- Despite continuing tensions in the border region, several
hundred Kosovars manage to cross into Montenegro from Kosovo.
- Departures under the humanitarian evacuation program on
Monday totaled 1,142, bringing the overall count to date to more than 62,000.
- An estimated 772,000 refugees and displaced people are in
the region, including 64,200 in Montenegro, 246,700 in the FYR of Macedonia, 439,500 in
Albania and 21,500 in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Major Developments
ALBANIA
On Monday, more than 1,400 refugees arrived at the Morini
border crossing, including a further 216 released prisoners from Smrekrovnica prison in
Kosovska Mitrovica in northern Kosovo.
As the refugees were coming in, two shots were fired
across the border, the bullets coming close to UNHCR staff on duty.
Mondays arrivals brought to 6,000 the number of
Kosovars who had entered Albania over the past four days. Before that, the influx had
slowed to a trickle for a week.
Meanwhile, the organized relocation of refugees from
temporary camps in Kukes to southern Albania using NATO vehicles started Tuesday morning.
Eighty five refugees part of the 200 planned to be moved during the day were
transported in the morning on 10 NATO trucks to Camp Hope, a few kilometers from Fier in
southern Albania. The trip takes seven to nine hours.
Camp Hope, built by the American military, will eventually
have a capacity of some 20,000 refugees. It currently holds 3,000 refugees.
On Sunday, about 1,900 refugees were transported on 40
buses and seven trucks and tractor-wagons to the south from Kukes.
As the influx into Albania goes on, construction of tented
camps and communal shelters continues. There are now 49 tented camps in 12 prefectures in
Albania, including 16 which have been completed and 33 which are still under construction.
In addition, 287 communal centers have been registered, of which 128 are now occupied and
the rest are in various stages of completion. Of the 440,000 refugees in Albania, more
than 81,000 are in tented camps and around 73,000 are in communal centers sport
centers, schools and public buildings. The rest of the refugees more than a quarter
of a million people are staying with host families.
As facilities operated on a bilateral basis are being
handed over to UNHCR, its staff are attempting to provide a sustainable standard of
assistance in all the camps and refugee centers. Over the past week, UNHCR has signed six
agreements worth $3 million to accelerate response to emergency needs. So far, 31 projects
are in place, covering distribution of basic and complementary food and such items as
blankets, mattresses, sleeping bags, jerry cans and plastic sheets. Other projects include
improvement of water, sanitation and health services.
UNHCR has started the first distribution of the new
standard food basket in the camps and collective centers. New agreements with bakeries
have been signed for bread production. The Red Cross is gradually taking over food
distribution to refugees in host families. UNHCR is also making efforts to coordinate
other assistance to host families, including a "cash for shelter program" by the
Swiss government initially for 6,500 families.
Planning for winterization continues. A team of Albanian
engineers has assessed potential collective buildings that could house 20,000 refugees
during winter.
FYR of MACEDONIA
Two trains and 13 buses offloaded more than 8,500 refugees
at the FYR of Macedonia border on Monday. After some delays, police agreed to move
refugees from the border and the Blace holding area to camps. The majority of the arrivals
were transported to the Stenkovec and Cegrane camps and the rest remained at the holding
area.
Registration of the arrivals went very quickly, witnessed
during the evening by visiting British and American delegations and the FYR of Macedonia
Minister of Interior, along with UNHCR staff.
The refugees came mostly from Pristina, Urosevac and
Vitina. They said Serbian forces were conducting a systematic "ethnic cleansing"
operation in these areas. Many said they originally came from Podujevo, the strategic town
along the Pristina-Belgrade road, and they claimed massacres have taken place in their
villages. Yugoslav troops have been conducting an offensive against the Kosovo Liberation
Army in the Podujevo region since December of last year.
Thousands more refugees were reported to be on the Serbian
side of the border, waiting to cross into the FYR of Macedonia. Many others are reported
to be heading towards the frontier from the interior of Kosovo. UNHCR staff and government
officials braced for another massive wave of arrivals on Tuesday.
MONTENEGRO
Although more than 200 displaced Kosovars managed to cross
into Montenegro on 21/22 May, there were virtually no arrivals on the 23rd. No information
is available yet concerning any border crossings on 24 May.
Those who came in over the weekend were from villages in
Istok. They said they left their homes in late March before the NATO bombing campaign and
went to the nearby mountains, staying in shepherds shelters. But in mid-May,
military reservists surrounded the area, seized food reserves and questioned the men. The
men were later released and the displaced people were trucked by the military to Rozaje.
UNHCR and UNICEF met with Kosovar teachers and the
director of the Dekor factory in Rozaje to discuss possible sites for school tents. The
factory has offered land where a school could be set up.
UNHCR/IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
A total of 1,142 refugees left from the FYR of Macedonia
under the humanitarian evacuation program on Monday May 24. They went to Italy, the
Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and the United Kingdom. So far, more than 62,000 refugees have
departed under the program in which UNHCR has received offers for 135,000 places in 39
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) |
|
Arrivals 21-23 May: ca. 220 |
|
64,200
|
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: 96,300 (source: UNHCR
Skopje); arrivals 24 May: ca. 8,500; departures by air 24 May: 1,142 (see Table 2 below) |
|
Registered host family population: 120,432
(source: Macedonian Red Cross) |
|
Unregistered elsewhere: 30,000 (source:
government) |
|
246,700
|
Albania |
|
Arrivals from Kosovo 24 May: ca. 1,500 |
|
439,500
|
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 |
|
771,900
|
Table 2: UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program of
Kosovar refugees
from the FYR of Macedonia 5 April through 24 May 1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
Receiving
Country |
Arrivals |
24
May |
Total
|
Australia |
|
1,627 |
Austria |
|
3,388 |
Belgium |
|
1,223 |
Canada |
|
4,919 |
Croatia |
|
188 |
Czech Republic |
|
824 |
Denmark |
|
1,513 |
Finland |
|
958 |
France |
|
3,717 |
Germany |
|
12,627 |
Iceland |
|
70 |
Ireland |
|
449 |
Israel |
|
106 |
Italy |
526 |
3,758 |
Netherlands |
150 |
2,594 |
Norway |
149 |
4,941 |
Poland |
|
1,049 |
Portugal |
|
808 |
Romania |
|
41 |
Slovakia |
|
90 |
Slovenia |
|
483 |
Spain |
|
900 |
Sweden |
155 |
2,133 |
Switzerland |
|
816 |
Turkey |
|
7,475 |
United Kingdom |
162 |
1,465 |
United States |
|
3,851 |
TOTAL |
1,142 |
62,013 |
This document is intended for public information purposes
only. It is not an official UN document.
|