AT A GLANCE
- UNHCR and other UN agencies prepare an appeal for funding of
various urgently needed programs through the end of the year for Kosovo refugees and
displaced people.
- Some 400 refugees arrive at the Morini border on Friday,
including two women wounded by sniper fire on the Kosovo side of the frontier.
- A total of 326 Kosovars cross into the FYR of Macedonia,
saying thousands more are poised to enter the country. UNHCR prepares for new influx.
- Departures on Friday under the humanitarian evacuation
program total 1,750, bringing the overall count to nearly 70,000.
- The estimated number of refugees and displaced people in the
region is 778,500, including 65,000 in Montenegro, 250,400 in the FYR of Macedonia and
441,500 in Albania.
Major Developments
FUNDING
UNHCR and other UN agencies are preparing an appeal,
expected to be issued next week, for funding of various aid programs for Kosovo refugees
and displaced people through the end of the year.
The appeal covers two possible situations developing. The
first involves a continuing conflict which will require assistance for 1.25 million
refugees and displaced people outside Kosovo. The second possibility is a peace settlement
happening soon and the return of the uprooted to their homes by autumn. This calls for aid
to some 1.5 million people in and out of Kosovo.
In both situations, the appeal will cover needs for the
ongoing emergency and limited winterization requirements.
UN agencies have issued a series of appeals for the Kosovo
emergency. UNHCR's component in these appeals for six months through June was $143
million. UNHCR still has to receive $10 million of this amount.
ALBANIA
More than 400 people arrived at the Morini crossing into
Albania on Friday, including two women wounded by sniper fire on the Kosovo side. Also
among the arrivals were 249 men freed from the Smrekovnica prison in Kosovska Mitrovica.
Serbian authorities have freed around 2,000 people held in this prison in northern Kosovo.
The Albanian military conducted exercises for several hours
during the morning, using live ammunition and blasting at targets near the border post.
The exercise prompted aid workers to withdraw from the border.
The refugee influx into northern Albania remained a trickle
as fighting between Serbian forces and the Kosovo Liberation Army continued along the
Kosovo frontier. Several artillery rounds have fallen on the Albanian side leaving two
villagers dead.
The relocation of refugees in the Kukes region, prompted by
security concerns, went on Friday. With support from NATO trucks, 410 refugees moved to
Camp Hope in Fier and Hamallaj in Durres. The refugees were first taken by road to the
Mjeda railway station in Skhodra, where they then boarded trains to central Albania.
NATO is expected to provide helicopters in the next several
days to transport from Kukes the sick and elderly refugees who cannot travel overland to
camps farther south.
FYR OF MACEDONIA
A total of 326 refugees arrived on Friday in the FYR of
Macedonia. The number included 210 who came in through Tabanovce, 48 across Jazince and 68
at the main immigration control in Blace.
Villagers at Jazince say that several thousand refugees
from the municipalities of Kacanik and Suva Reka are heading toward the Macedonian border.
UNHCR, along with the Macedonian Red Cross and the local charity agency El Hilal, is
prepositioning food, blankets, jerry cans and mattresses for the anticipated arrivals.
A group of 61 former prisoners who arrived Thursday gave
accounts of their captivity at the overcrowded Lipljan prison south of Pristina. They said
they were subjected to severe physical assault while undergoing interrogation. They all
had signs of serious beatings, including broken ribs.
Also on Friday, 105 refugees were transferred by bus from
Blace, Stenkovec and Radusa camps to Albania. UNHCR has been looking for volunteers to
relocate to Albania in a bid to relieve pressure on the teeming camps in the FYR of
Macedonia and to make room for new arrivals.
Meanwhile, the British government announced that it would
provide funds for the construction of a new camp site at Vrapciste, which could host some
12,000 new refugees.
On the health sector, a multi-agency task force met on
Thursday to discuss results of a recently completed assessment by CARE of reproductive
health services available in the camps. The survey showed that while prenatal care,
delivery and obstetrical services are adequately covered in the camps, services for babies
and women victims of violence vary. Demand for family planning services appears very low
and they are not routinely offered. The task force is drawing up a response to address the
needs in the camps.
UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
Departures on Friday under the humanitarian evacuation
program totaled 1,750, bringing the overall count to nearly 70,000. Destinations were
Austria, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the
United Kingdom.
UNHCR has received offers for 137,000 places in 40
countries under the program.
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