Source:http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 02 June 1999

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Kosovo Crisis Update 2 June 1999
 

AT A GLANCE
  • A total of 46 refugees arrive on Tuesday in northern Albania, including two slightly wounded by flying debris in intense fighting between Serbian forces and the Kosovo Liberation Army.
     
  • For the first time in three weeks, no arrivals are reported on Tuesday at the main border crossing into the FYR of Macedonia, although 370 are able to enter through other entry points.
     
  • More than 1,500 Kosovars enter Montenegro Sunday and Monday; they confirm reports that Serbian authorities are only allowing people with valid documents to leave the country.
     
  • Departures under the UNHCR-IOM humanitarian evacuation program total 1,026 on Tuesday, bringing the overall count to more than 74,000.
     
  • The estimated number of refugees and displaced people in the region stands at 781,600. The figure includes 68,400 in Montenegro, 248,900 in the FYR of Macedonia and 442,600 in Albania.

Major Developments

ALBANIA

Forty-six refugees straggled into the Morini crossing on Tuesday amid intense fighting in which NATO planes conducted airstrikes against Serbian forces battling the Kosovo Liberation Army along the border.

Two of the arrivals were slightly wounded, apparently by flying debris.

In the worst fighting so far across the border, five rocket and artillery rounds fell over a span of 15 minutes in an area as close as 500 meters from the Morini entry point in the northern Albanian border town of Kukes at mid-afternoon, forcing aid workers to withdraw farther inland.

Four explosions were reported in the evening at Krume in the Has district, about 25 kilometers north of Kukes, near a hospital and a mosque, where 500 refugees were encamped.

Aid workers have withdrawn from Krume, where a heavy KLA presence has been reported. Serbian forces have been firing at KLA positions in Krume and UNHCR is sending trucks to Has to evacuate refugees who want to leave.

Serbian artillery and mortar attacks against Pogai near the Morini border and villages in Has have prompted thousands of local Albanians to flee their homes in the last several days. At least two villagers have been killed in the bombardment.

Tuesday’s arrivals at Morini told UNHCR that Serb forces were detaining Kosovars at police and railway stations and other public buildings for two or three days to be used as human shields. They said some 20 civilians were detained at each police station.

The refugees gave accounts of continuing atrocities committed by Serbian troops against civilians in Kosovo. In one incident at Tusus, a suburb of Prizren, 25 people were allegedly killed by Serbian police on May 26. Police reportedly entered houses at random, forced males from 12 to 90 years of age onto courtyards and executed them. One refugee said seven close friends were among those killed. The report could not be verified.

FYR of MACEDONIA

Arrivals in the FYR of Macedonia continued to be a trickle, with 370 entering the country on Tuesday. Half of the refugees came in through the unofficial border crossings; the others have documents. In a sudden shift in policy, Serbian authorities have refused to allow Kosovars without proper papers to leave. Last month, 30,000 people were transported to the Macedonian border in a renewed ethnic cleansing campaign.

For the first time since May 17, no arrival was reported at the main border crossing at Blace.

Refugees in a group of 197 who entered Tabanovce said police and paramilitary troops had been going on a house-to-house search detaining young people at Gnjlane and Pristina, where they originated. Some said they left their homes six weeks ago when Serbian troops began setting houses on fire.

In other developments:

  • 103 refugees left from Senakos and Cegrane camps for Korce in Albania under UNHCR’s humanitarian transfer program. More than 600 refugees have volunteered to leave for Albania since UNHCR began a campaign to look for people who wish to relocate from the FYR of Macedonia to ease pressure in the camps and make room for new arrivals.

  •  
  • UNHCR has placed an order for 20,000 blankets with local Macedonian companies. Other items are also being procured locally. In the meantime, airlift flights bringing humanitarian aid to Skopje continue, including tents and plastic sheeting.
     
  • Contingency stocks are improving, allowing the delivery of 1,650 tents to camps in southern Albania. In the next five days, a shipment of 127 metric tons of soap will arrive from Egypt via Greece. Convoys of trucks ferrying aid items from the United Kingdom, Slovakia and Greece are arriving in Skopje. UNHCR is also looking at warehousing space for materials to be used for its winterization program.

MONTENEGRO

More than 1,500 refugees entered Montenegro from Kosovo on Sunday and Monday.

Most of the arrivals came from the northern Kosovo town of Kosovska Mitrovica, where systematic ethnic cleansing has been reported.

Confirming earlier reports by refugees in the FYR of Macedonia, the Kosovo arrivals in Montenegro said they had been told by Serbian authorities to obtain a document intended as a food ration card but in fact to be used to establish residence. The arrivals said their identity cards were destroyed upon leaving Kosovska Mitrovica.

UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM

Departures under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration totaled 1,026 on Tuesday, bringing the overall count to 74,014. Destinations were Australia, Austria, Croatia, Germany, Norway and the United Kingdom.

UNHCR has been offered 137,000 places in 40 countries under the program.
 

KOSOVO DISPLACEMENT STATISTICS

Information as at 2 June 1999, 08:00 GMT

The figures in Table 1 are estimates, rounded to the nearest hundred. Total recent displacement includes figures in Tables 1 and 2. See also the figures for asylum applications by citizens of FRY, mostly Kosovars, in Table 3.
 

Table 1: Daily Population Estimates (figures refer to displacement since March 1998)
 
Refugees/Displaced in: Remarks

Total

Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 
(Republic of Montenegro)
Further reported arrivals 20-31 May: ca. 830

68,400

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: 110,300 (source: UNHCR Skopje); arrivals 1 June: ca. 370; departures by air 1 June: 1,026 (see Table 2 below); overland departures to Albania 1 June: 103
Estimated number of refugees living in host families and elsewhere: 138,600 (sources: Macedonian Red Cross and government)

248,900

Albania
Arrivals from Kosovo 1 June: ca. 50
Arrivals from Macedonia 1 June: 103

442,600

Bosnia-Herzegovina
Total comprises Kosovar refugees only
Also resulting from the Kosovo conflict: 22,000 from Sandzak, 30,900 Serb, Croatians and Montenegrins from FRY (source: government)

21,700

TOTAL

781,600

Table 2: UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program of Kosovar refugees 
from the FYR of Macedonia 5 April through 1 June 1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
 

Receiving Country

Arrivals

1 June

Total 

Australia 432 2,486
Austria 169 4,552
Belgium 1,223
Canada 5,154
Croatia 96 284
Czech Republic 824
Denmark 1,997
Finland 958
France 4,543
Germany 128 13,378
Iceland 70
Ireland 603
Israel 206
Italy 5,829
Malta 105
Netherlands 3,568
Norway 119 6,070
Poland 1,049
Portugal 952
Romania 41
Slovakia 90
Slovenia 483
Spain 1,124
Sweden 2,606
Switzerland 1,184
Turkey 7,475
United Kingdom 82 2,176
United States 4,984
TOTAL 1,026 74,014

This document is intended for public information purposes only. It is not an official UN document.

Document compiled by Dr S D Stein
Last update 02/06/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
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