AT A GLANCE
- About 800 refugees arrive in Albania on Wednesday,
including more than 200 former detainees from the prison at Smrekovnica.
- Only around 300 refugees enter the FYR of Macedonia on
Wednesday. There is no sign of the thousands who had reportedly massed on the Serbian side
of the border.
- Humanitarian evacuations from the FYR of Macedonia reach
more than 65,700 with the departure on Wednesday of 2,174 refugees to 12 countries.
- An estimated 779,000 refugees and displaced people are in
the region, including 65,000 in Montenegro, 252,300 in the FYR of Macedonia, 440,600 in
Albania and 21,500 in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Major Developments
ALBANIA
A total of just 807 refugees arrived on Wednesday at the
Morini crossing, some families on their tractors, and some on foot. The refugees arriving
on foot included 200-250 ex-detainees, released from the prison at Smrekovnica in Kosovska
Mitrovica municipality. So far, more than 2,000 prisoners have arrived in Albania after
being freed from Kosovo jails, apparently to make room for new detainees, according to
previous arrivals.
During the day on Wednesday there was fighting and intense
NATO air activity in the border area, prompting UNHCR and other agencies to reduce staff
there. During the day, several shells fell in Albanian villages in the Krume district,
reportedly killing at least two villagers and injuring others.
The fighting in the border region made the need to
relocate refugees from tented camps in the Kukes region more acute. The relocation
operation continued Wednesday, with 2,279 being moved south, including 300 transported on
NATO trucks to a refugee camp at Fier.
FYR of MACEDONIA
Around 300 Kosovar refugees arrived on Thursday in the FYR
of Macedonia, mainly through the Jazince border crossing. Just 61 persons crossed at
Blace, and all were men who had been released from the prison at Lipljan, where they had
been detained since 24 April.
Looking emaciated and exhausted, like the former prisoners
who have been arriving in Albania over the past few days, the men said they had been
arrested and accused of being terrorists. After their release yesterday, Serbian
authorities took them by bus to the Blace border crossing.
More than 30,000 refugees had entered the FYR of Macedonia
over the past five days, saying renewed ethnic cleansing was taking place in Kosovo. The
refugees who arrived on Tuesday said thousands were still queuing on the Serbian side of
the border, but on Wednesday the area was empty, police said. There was no immediate
explanation available.
Few details are available yet on Wednesdays arrivals
through Jazince, but there were new accounts from the group of 1,000 refugees who came
across the area on Monday, 25 May. They had arrived at the border on a bus from Pristina
and a convoy of 30 tractor-wagons from villages in the Kacanik and Gnjilane
municipalities.
Some said they saw villages burning when they left and
that young men were taken out from the convoy by Serb forces. These men, hands on their
heads, were reportedly marched off to an unknown destination.
Also on Wednesday, 230 refugees who had arrived on Tuesday
at Blace were transported by bus to camps in Korce, Albania. They were volunteers who came
forward in response to UNHCRs campaign to identify new arrivals willing to move to
Albania, in order to relieve pressure on the congested camps in the FYR of Macedonia.
Because of the recent influx, areas reserved for
educational activities have had to be allocated to new arrivals at Stenkovec and Cegrane.
UNICEF has expressed concern about this development, which slows the establishment of
stability in the daily life of camp children. UNHCR shares this concern and is looking at
the possibility of transferring the school tents to an area located in between the two
Stenkovec sites.
Meanwhile, health teams have begun a vaccination campaign
against measles among refugees hosted by local villagers. Around 5,000 children have been
vaccinated during the first week of the campaign led by WHO and UNICEF. The Ministry of
Health says 90 percent of Macedonian children have been immunized, but a much lower number
of Kosovar youngsters have been vaccinated.
MONTENEGRO
Only eight arrivals from Kosovo were reported on Wednesday
26 May as tension continues along the border between Montenegro and Kosovo, following the
takeover of the area by the Yugoslav army two weeks ago.
Updated figures for 25 May indicate around 600 people
arrived in Montenegro from Kosovo. The number includes the previously reported group of
about 490 refugees, of whom 70 men had initially been separated from their women and
children and sent to the military barracks at Andrijevica.
Intervention by UNHCR and the head of Montenegros
special police prevented the army from sending the men back to Kosovo. Police have
provided UNHCR with a list of the men who were reportedly beaten upon their arrest by the
army for questioning in connection with activities of the Kosovo Liberation Army.
UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
Humanitarian evacuations from the FYR of Macedonia have
reached 65,749 with the departure on Wednesday of 2,174 refugees to Austria, Canada,
Denmark, Germany, Israel, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, the United
Kingdom and the United States.
Under the program, UNHCR has received offers for 137,000
places from 40 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) |
|
Additional reported arrivals 25 May: ca. 160 |
|
64,900
|
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: 106,200 (source: UNHCR
Skopje, figure revised and also reflects movements towards camps from host families);
arrivals 26 May: ca. 300; departures by air 26 May: 2,174 (see Table 2 below); overland
departures to Albania 26 May: 230 |
|
Registered host family population: ca.
116,100 (source: Macedonian Red Cross, see note for camp figure above) |
|
Unregistered elsewhere: 30,000 (source:
government) |
|
252,300
|
Albania |
|
Arrivals from Kosovo 26 May: ca. 800 |
|
Arrivals from Albania 26 May: 230 |
|
440,600
|
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 |
|
779,300
|
Table 2: UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program of
Kosovar refugees
from the FYR of Macedonia 5 April through 26 May 1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
Receiving
Country |
Arrivals |
26
May |
Total
|
Australia |
|
1,627 |
Austria |
162 |
3,713 |
Belgium |
|
1,223 |
Canada |
235 |
5,154 |
Croatia |
|
188 |
Czech Republic |
|
824 |
Denmark |
159 |
1,672 |
Finland |
|
958 |
France |
|
3,925 |
Germany |
127 |
12,872 |
Iceland |
|
70 |
Ireland |
|
449 |
Israel |
100 |
206 |
Italy |
344 |
4,487 |
Malta |
|
105 |
Netherlands |
138 |
2,865 |
Norway |
114 |
5,202 |
Poland |
|
1,049 |
Portugal |
|
952 |
Romania |
|
41 |
Slovakia |
|
90 |
Slovenia |
|
483 |
Spain |
111 |
1,011 |
Sweden |
161 |
2,294 |
Switzerland |
|
816 |
Turkey |
|
7,475 |
United Kingdom |
158 |
1,782 |
United States |
365 |
4,216 |
TOTAL |
2,174 |
65,749 |
This document is intended for public information
purposes only. It is not an official UN document. |