Source: http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 11 June 1999

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Kosovo Crisis Update 11 June 1999  

AT A GLANCE
  • UNHCR and its partners are getting ready to provide urgently needed relief to hundreds of thousands of people marooned inside Kosovo; first U.N. multi-agency convoy in two and a half months is prepared to go into the Serbian province on the weekend.
     
  • Some 400 refugees enter the FYR of Macedonia, many of them after wandering across the hills of Kosovo for several months, unaware that the war is over. For the second straight day, no arrivals are reported in northern Albania as the guns across the border fall silent.
     
  • The first large group of Serbs leaving Kosovo – numbering more than 100 – arrives in Montenegro even as NATO commanders issue assurances that the international security force that will be fielded there will protect all people regardless of ethnicity.
     
  • A total of 813 people depart under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration, bringing the overall count to more than 82,500.
     
  • The estimated number of refugees and displaced people in the region is 780,200, including 69,800 in Montenegro, 244,500 in the FYR of Macedonia, 444,200 in Albania and 21,700 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS

UNHCR and other agencies begin today the monumental task of providing humanitarian aid inside Kosovo, initially to hundreds of thousands of displaced people and later to the three quarters of a million people outside the Serbian province who are eager to return.

As many as 500,000 to 600,000 people are believed to be in desperate condition inside Kosovo and are the main priority of returning relief teams. There has been no assistance provided to them in the last two and a half months and the situation is grim, according to a UN assessment mission that visited Kosovo last month.

UNHCR is sending senior liaison personnel with the international security force which is to deploy in Kosovo, possibly starting today. An initial team of UNHCR staff will be standing by in Skopje ready to move to Kosovo as soon as the green light is given.

UNHCR and other agencies are loading a convoy of 40 vehicles that will proceed to Kosovo as soon as feasible, possibly as early as Sunday, if everything goes well and the 60-kilometer route to Pristina is clear of land mines.

The convoy includes 32 trucks from UNHCR, WFP, UNICEF and selected NGOs. It will carry humanitarian daily rations, or Meals Ready to Eat, pallets of bottled water, blankets, tents, plastic sheeting and hygienic kits. They will also carry office equipment.

The convoy plans to go to Pristina, setting up temporary offices at the Slatina airport outside the provincial capital. Two multi-agency convoys are planned to go to Kosovo daily from Skopje – the logistical hub for relief operations in the Serbian province – once security is assured.

The convoy will be the first by UNHCR and its implementing partners since their staff were evacuated on the eve of the NATO bombing campaign on 24 March.

Many refugees who recently arrived in the asylum countries say they left Kosovo because of the threat of starvation. Hardly any food crops have been grown in Kosovo since the conflict broke out in the spring of 1998. Large numbers of cattle have been killed and left to rot in the fields.

In the FYR of Macedonia and Albania, UNHCR is distributing leaflets and using radio to broadcast information about return prospects and cautioning refugees not to rush back to Kosovo until security forces clear routes of land mines and determine that it is safe for them to do so. NATO said that the border control points will be manned by the Kosovo force.

ALBANIA

For the second straight day, no arrivals were reported on Thursday at the Morini crossing in the northern Albanian town of Kukes. The border was reported generally quiet – unlike last week when Serbian forces battled the Kosovo Liberation Army.

The relocation of refugees from Kukes to points south continued on a small scale on Thursday, with 127 people getting on trucks to join families who left earlier because of security concerns at the border.

FYR of MACEDONIA

A total of 403 refugees crossed into the FYR of Macedonia – most of them without papers. Only 60 entered officially at Tabanovce, the rest sneaked across the mountains and came to villages in Malina Mala, Jazince and Tanusevci.

The arrivals said they had been on the move for months and several said they would have stayed had they known that the war is over. Most of them were men anxious to join their families in Albania.

MONTENEGRO

At least 126 people from Kosovo, including 119 Serbs, arrived in Montenegro on Wednesday. It was the first large group of Serbs reported by police to have left Kosovo for the neighboring republic since the peace agreement was announced last week.

NATO officials have said that the international security force deploying in Kosovo will protect all people in Kosovo regardless of ethnicity.

UNHCR has expressed concern about the situation of the remaining Serbian civilians in Kosovo, once the Yugoslav forces withdraw. UNHCR believes that the Kosovo Serbs’ right to remain in their home areas must be safeguarded, as the Kosovars go back to their villages.

UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM

Departures under the UNHCR-IOM humanitarian evacuation program totaled 813 on Thursday, bringing the overall count to 82,518. Destinations were Germany, Ireland, Switzerland, Turkey, and the United Kingdom.

UNHCR has received offers for 137,000 places in 40 countries under the program.
 

KOSOVO DISPLACEMENT STATISTICS

Information as at 11 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)
Arrivals 9 June: ca. 130

69,800

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: 105,900 (source: UNHCR Skopje); arrivals 10 June: 403; departures by air 10 June: 813 (see Table 2 below); overland departures to Albania 10 June: none (cumulative total to date: 951)
Estimated number of refugees living in host families and elsewhere: 138,600 (sources: Macedonian Red Cross and government)

244,500

Albania
Arrivals from Kosovo 10 June: none
Arrivals from Macedonia 10 June: none

444,200

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

780,200

Table 2: UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program of Kosovar refugees 
from the FYR of Macedonia 5 April through 10 June 1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
 

Receiving Country

Arrivals

10 June

Total 

Australia 2,932
Austria 5,080
Belgium 1,223
Canada 5,174
Croatia 284
Czech Republic 824
Denmark 2,507
Finland 958
France 5,388
Germany 120 14,254
Iceland 70
Ireland 144 893
Israel 206
Italy 5,829
Malta 105
Netherlands 4,067
Norway 6,070
Poland 1,049
Portugal 1,271
Romania 41
Slovakia 90
Slovenia 745
Spain 1,240
Sweden 3,245
Switzerland 167 1,517
Turkey 220 8,013
United Kingdom 162 3,446
United States 5,997
TOTAL 813 82,518

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 11/06/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
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