AT A GLANCE
- Around 220 Kosovars enter Albania at the Morini border on
Tuesday, including prisoners freed from a northern Kosovo jail, reportedly to make room
for hundreds of new detainees.
- More than 7,500 refugees cross into the FYR of Macedonia;
thousands more are queuing to enter amid reports of a new wave of systematic ethnic
cleansing in Kosovo; UNHCR fears crisis in the overcrowded camps if the rate of arrivals
continues.
- A total of 1,562 refugees leave for nine countries on
Tuesday from the FYR of Macedonia, bringing to 63,600 the overall departures under the
humanitarian evacuation program.
- An estimated 778,400 refugees and displaced people are in
the region, including 64,700 in Montenegro, 252,600 in the FYR of Macedonia and 439,600 in
Albania.
Major Developments
ALBANIA
About 220 people crossed the Morini border on Tuesday,
including 104 male prisoners released from Smrekovnica prison in northern Kosovo. The
total number released from this prison over the past four days has reached around 1,300,
out of a reported prison population of 3,000.
Smrekovnica is now being filled with new prisoners,
according to refugee accounts. One refugee said that 690 new prisoners had been brought in
on Sunday. Another refugee insisted that the number was around 1,200 and that he had
counted them inside the large hall where they were located after their arrival. He said
they were from four villages in Vucitrn Bruznik, Nevoljane, Kolo and Bukos. The
prisoners were reportedly forced to sign a blank sheet of paper for unexplained reasons.
The new arrivals told similar stories to the previous
members of this group widespread beatings, very little food and water. Two older
men, who arrived long after the others, collapsed after crossing the border, probably
because of dehydration.
The prisoners were bussed or trucked to a distance of five
or six kilometers from the border and had to walk the rest of the way. On hot days like
Tuesday, this last walk was very hard for them in their wasted and often battered state.
The loading and departure of the first organized NATO
convoy evacuating refugees from the Kukes region went smoothly Tuesday morning, with
around 200 people on board ten trucks. Ten more NATO trucks were used to ferry other
relocating refugees to Fier.
From Tirana, UNHCR reports that as part of an education
program, UNHCR is looking at various surveys on the number of refugee children. One study
shows that 8.5 percent of the refugee population comprises children aged from 4-6; 10.3
percent from 7-10 years; 10.3 percent from 11-14 years and 7.5 percent from 15-18 years.
However, UNICEF and several NGOs estimate that these figures are conservative, and that up
to 50 percent of the refugees are between the age of 3-18.
UNHCR and the World Bank have agreed to provide funds to
support the cost of printing textbooks for the education program in Albania. This project
is aimed at strengthening the capacity of the education ministry to ensure formal
education for refugee and local children.
UNHCR is also coordinating various psycho-social
activities by NGOs, often with their own funding. UNHCR is holding weekly coordination
meetings on community services, while the education ministry presides over weekly meetings
on education.
FYR of MACEDONIA
More than 7,500 refugees arrived in the FYR of Macedonia
on Tuesday, bringing to more than 30,600 the total number of new arrivals in the country
since Friday when the influx resumed after one week.
The arrivals say a new and systematic wave of ethnic
cleansing was taking place in Kosovo which appear to target such big cities as Pristina,
Urosevac and Vitina. Trains and buses were being used by Serbian authorities in a movement
similar to the first massive wave of arrivals following the beginning of NATO airstrikes
in Yugoslavia on 24 March.
Of the new arrivals, more than 6,200 came through the main
border crossing at Blace, 1,000 at the Jazince area and 450 at Tabanovce. Those who
entered at Blace had been at the no-man's land for more than 12 hours. As soon as the area
was cleared, the Serbian authorities at the Kosovo side of the border sent over another
large group of Kosovars. They said that thousands had massed at the Serbian side, waiting
to cross into Blace.
In the past days, three to four trainloads of people have
been arriving at the Macedonian border, along with convoys of buses from the major Kosovo
towns. The arrivals reported Serbian troops were going from house to house, ordering
residents to leave at gunpoint, stripping them of their valuables and beating them.
Some refugees said that only those with proper documents
were permitted to leave Kosovo. They said that in the last few days, as people were being
expelled, police were forcing them to sign certificates stating they were leaving their
residence and renouncing their citizenship of their own free will.
In another development, UNHCR has agreed to deposit
$800,000 to the government Health Insurance Fund following lengthy negotiations on the
cost of providing medical care for refugees. Following the deposit, the Ministry of Health
will instruct clinics to resume providing health services to refugees.
UNHCR is discussing with aid agencies community services
for refugees in the FYR of Macedonia. At a recent meeting, UNHCR and representatives of
various non-governmental organizations discussed models for psycho-social activities and
training needs. Many NGOs have already started or are planning counseling and training
activities for refugees.
UNHCR has also reached agreement on enlisting faculty
members at the University of Skopje to carry out topographic and pipeline surveys at
Cegrane camp for use in the design of water supply pipelines and drainage trenches.
MONTENEGRO
Some 490 Kosovars arrived on Monday in Montenegro but
encountered elements of the Yugoslav army who reportedly separated 73 men from women and
children. The separation was witnessed by the head of the Montenegrin special police who
had discussions about it with the army authorities.
Tension has been reported along the frontier since the
Yugoslav army took control of the border a week ago.
Police transported the women and children to Rozaje and
the men were reportedly brought to nearby Berane.
UNHCR/IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
A total of 1,562 refugees left the FYR of Macedonia under
the humanitarian evacuation program, bringing the overall departures to 63,575. The
refugees went to Austria, France, Germany, Italy, Malta, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal
and the United Kingdom.
UNHCR has received 135,000 offers in 39 countries under
the program.
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