AT A GLANCE
- UNHCR hopes to begin distribution of urgently needed aid in
two areas outside Pristina Monday, at the start of a massive humanitarian relief program
in Kosovo.
- High Commissioner Sadako Ogata says UNHCR faces enormous
challenges as it begins a program to rebuild shattered lives in the Serbian province.
- More than 4,000 Serbian civilians from Kosovo move into
Montenegro and others into Serbia proper, as displaced Kosovars begin to trickle back to
their villages.
- Departures from the FYR of Macedonia under the humanitarian
evacuation program of UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration over the last
three days total 1,769, bringing the overall count to 84,450.
- The number of Kosovar Albanian refugees and displaced
people in the region stands at 779,700, including 69,700 in Montenegro, 243,700 in the FYR
of Macedonia, 444,600 in Albania and 21,700 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS
High Commissioner Sadako Ogata says UNHCR and its partners
face a daunting task as they resume operations in Kosovo.
In a statement made as the first multi-agency convoy
rolled into the Kosovo capital, Pristina, on Sunday, Mrs. Ogata said she hoped that the
resumption of humanitarian activity in Kosovo would "lead to the end of a terrible
nightmare and the healing of wounds."
"The challenges facing us are enormous and to meet
them we need the full support of all involved," said Mrs. Ogata.
UNHCRs return plan calls for immediate aid
to an estimated half a million displaced people in Kosovo. UNHCR staff in Kosovo hope to
make their first field assessment visits on Monday.
The displaced people are thought to be concentrated in
Glogovac, Klina, Obilic, Orahovac, Podujevo, Srbica, Suva Reka and Vucitrn, as well as in
Stimlje and Mitrovica. These areas had been the scene of heavy fighting between Serbian
forces and the Kosovo Liberation Army during the past 16 months and the displaced people
there are reported to be in desperate condition. The last food convoy to the area was on
22 March.
Media reports say that displaced people within Kosovo have
begun to trickle back to their villages. Some returns have also been reported in Prizren
even though Serbian troops have yet to complete their withdrawal from the area.
UNHCR believes that up to 500,000 refugees may return to
Kosovo from Albania and the FYR of Macedonia within three to four months. Assistance
programs in the asylum countries will need to continue for the forseeable future, and most
likely through the winter.
An information campaign has been going on in camps since
last week, urging people not to move back until security is assured. UNICEF has launched a
major effort to use teachers to provide essential mine awareness information for refugee
schools children. Mine clearance teams are beginning the huge task of trying to determine
areas which may have land mines and booby traps.
KOSOVO
UNHCR is planning to begin distribution of emergency aid
today. The intention is to distribute relief items to displaced people in Stimlje
southwest of Pristina and in Kosovska Mitrovica in northern Kosovo. Assessment teams set
out for these two places early on Monday and trucks will move there as soon as it is
determined that the road is safe and distribution is possible.
On Sunday, the first multi-agency convoy to Kosovo in
nearly three months arrived in Pristina. The convoy included 23 trucks loaded with 250
tons of relief aid, including Humanitarian Daily Rations, or Meals Ready to Eat, wheat
flour, hygienic kits, blankets, tents, plastic sheeting and bottled water. The supplies
were from UNHCR, WFP and UNICEF.
Some of the supplies were offloaded at the UNHCR warehouse
just outside Pristina to enable the vehicles to turn around to Skopje for reloading, but
other trucks were on standby with their cargo ready to move for distribution.
A second relief convoy left Skopje on Monday morning for
the 60-kilometer trip to Pristina.
Some of the several dozen UNHCR staff who are in Pristina
slept at the warehouse on Sunday night. They report hearing gunfire and some loud
detonations during the night and that a petrol station about 500 meters away burned.
ALBANIA
UNHCR and other aid agencies are awaiting a signal from
German troops deployed in the Prizren area before proceeding on an assessment mission to
Prizren in southwestern Kosovo. The German forces moved into Prizren on Sunday from Kukes,
accompanied by press and one WFP/UNICEF team, but other journalists and aid workers had to
turn back because Serbian forces have not completed their withdrawal and there were
reports of sniper fire and tension along the road. About 200 refugees anxious to go back
who had gathered at the border on Sunday evening finally also returned to camps in Kukes.
FYR of MACEDONIA
A small group of refugees in the FYR of Macedonia tried to
cross the border into Kosovo on Saturday but got stuck in the no-mans land when they
saw Yugoslav officials still manning the immigration control on the Kosovo side. They were
later sent back to the camps.
On Monday morning around 60 refugee vehicles had lined up
at the Blace crossing, intending to return. There were reports that a few other refugees,
still in possession of Yugoslav passports, had travelled to Presevo on the regular
Kumanovo to Presevo bus line.
MONTENEGRO AND SERBIA
UNHCR staff in Kosovo saw convoys of Serbian civilians
leaving the province on Sunday for Serbia proper. In addition, UNHCRs office in
Podgorica reports a steady flow of civilians of Serb and Montenegrin origin arriving from
Kosovo in Montenego and proceeding mainly to friends, relatives and other host families
all over the region.
UNHCR staff in the Montenegrin border town of Rozaje were
informed by authorities there that around 900 Serbian civilians arrived on Thursday, 1,600
on Friday and 1,900 on Saturday.
The Montenegrin governments Commissioner for
Displaced Persons has confirmed that these people will be assisted on the same basis as
others displaced from Kosovo.
There has been no official report on the number of Serbs
who have left Kosovo. The UNHCR office in Belgrade hopes to be able soon to assess the
situation in the area of Nis in central Serbia where many of these people are reported to
be arriving.
UNHCR is extremely worried that the peace in Kosovo may be
starting with a new exodus, that of Serbian civilians, and hopes the KFOR deployment will
provide the necessary security for all civilians to remain in and return to their homes.
UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
A total of 1,769 refugees left the FYR of Macedonia under
the UNHCR-IOM humanitarian evacuation program 755 on Friday, 158 on Saturday and
856 on Sunday. The overall count is 84,450.
UNHCR is currently reviewing the evacuation program in the
light of the peace agreement on Kosovo, in consultation with concerned governments.
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