AT A GLANCE
- UNHCR voices concern over reports that some Kosovars have
been compelled to renounce their citizenship upon leaving Serbia and that a new
registration process is being carried out by the Serbian authorities for those remaining
in the province. Both moves might hinder the return of refugees and displaced people to
their homes.
- With no sign of immediate implementation of a peace
agreement in Kosovo, refugees still sign up with UNHCR for relocation from the northern
Albanian border town of Kukes to points south.
- Shelling hit a FYR of Macedonia border village as several
hundred refugees headed across the border; new arrivals say authorities are conducting a
depopulation campaign in Kosovar villages.
- Evacuation flights continue after a weekend lull; 790
Kosovars fly to five countries.
- The number of refugees and displaced people stands at
782,300, including 21,700 in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 69,600 in Montenegro, 247,000 in the
FYR of Macedonia and 444,000 in Albania.
MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS
UNHCR is concerned by a number of reports from recently
arriving refugees in the FYR of Macedonia and in Montenegro that people remaining in
Kosovo are being required to obtain a new registration document from the authorities. This
is apparently a document which registers and deregisters a persons official place of
residence.
Some refugees have indicated that they fled, rather than
present themselves to the authorities to obtain this document.
In addition, testimony has been gathered from some
refugees arriving in the FYR of Macedonia who said that passports were being issued by the
Serbian authorities to persons wishing to leave, but that upon exiting Kosovo, the
refugees were asked to sign declarations that they renounce their citizenship.
ALBANIA
With no immediate sign that last weeks peace accord
will soon open the way home, around 500 refugees voluntarily boarded 19 NATO trucks in the
northern Albanian border town of Kukes on Monday to relocate to camps in the south.
However, on Sunday UNHCR cancelled evacuation from Kukes
after very few people showed up for the trip organized by UNHCR to put them safely away
from the fighting along the frontier between Serbian forces and the Kosovo Liberation
Army. There had been optimism among the refugees that the war would end and they would
quickly go back to Kosovo, but that hope seemed to have faded Monday with the announcement
of a stalemate on the military implementation of the peace plan.
An average of 2,000 people had been joining the caravans
leaving Kukes daily for camps in southern and central Albania, before the peace deal was
announced last Thursday.
Also on Monday, 96 refugees all men released in the
morning from the Smerkovnica prison outside Kosovska Mitrovica in northern Albania
arrived at the Morini crossing into Kukes.
After they crossed the border, the sound of mortar fire
and NATO sorties was heard on the other side of the border.
The arrivals said they had been held for seven days. On
Monday morning, they were taken to a local school for final interrogation by police, whose
office had been bombed, and then put on buses for the border. They said 300 new prisoners
were brought in on Saturday, and they recounted stories of mistreatment other former
prisoners previously told.
More than 2,500 prisoners had been freed in the past two
weeks from Smerkovnica. New arrivals estimated at 500 the number of men still in the
prison.
The evacuation of refugees from Krume, 25 kilometers north
of Kukes, continued on Monday. The area, where a significant KLA presence has been
reported, had been subjected to Serbian artillery and mortar attacks from the Kosovo side.
However, the area was reported quiet over the last two days.
More than 8,000 villagers have fled the Krume area.
FYR of MACEDONIA
Scores of mortar rounds and rifle-fired grenades from
Kosovo struck the border village of Vratnica at Jazince on Monday, prompting residents to
flee. It was the first time a Macedonian village has been targetted from Kosovo. Villagers
were reported to be returning on Tuesday morning.
A total of 426 refugees arrived into the FYR of Macedonia
from Kosovo during the day. 320 came in at at Vratnica, an unofficial border crossing near
Jazince. 100 entered at Tabanovce and 6 at Blace.
Arrivals in the last several days said that Serbian forces
were continuing a campaign of "ethnic cleansing" in Kosovo despite
Belgrades agreement Thursday to a peace plan for Kosovo. They said that hundreds
more people were waiting to cross the Macedonian border.
Except for four women and a few children, all the arrivals
at Vratnica were men. They said that many women, children and elderly were still in the
hills, but were too weak to trek down. They said the group had been hiding in the
mountains for months, surviving on corn. The journey to the Macedonian border took seven
days from Berisha near Komarane just north of the Kosovo capital, Pristina. They said they
originally came from the Drenica region in central Kosovo.
MONTENEGRO
Around 250 Kosovars arrived in Montenegro on Saturday and
Sunday. Most of the Kosovars who recently fled to Montenegro came from the northern town
of Kosovska Mitrovica.
Work on a new camp site, Pine Tree III, at Ulcinj is
expected to be completed by the end of the week. It can hold up to 2,400 people. An
additional site has also been identified Pine Tree IV. This will shelter 600
refugees, mostly the sick and the elderly.
Facilities at Ulcinj are being improved to accommodate
Kosovars being transferred from the border town of Rozaje, where increased military
activity has been reported in recent weeks, prompting UNHCR to relocate the displaced
there to Ulcinj.
UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
A total of 790 refugees in the FYR of Macedonia departed
on Monday under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International
Organization for Migration, bringing the overall count to 79,013. Destinations were
France, Germany, Netherlands, Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Denmark, Germany and Australia are winding up the
selection for their quotas.
Over the weekend, only around 300 people departed under
the program in which UNHCR has received offers for 137,000 places in 40 countries.
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