AT A GLANCE
- UNHCR assessment teams fan out inside Kosovo amid
continuing tensions and the threat of land mines; UNHCR dispatches staff to reopen its
satellite office in Kosovos ancient town of Prizren.
- UNHCR expresses deep concern about the departure of
thousands of Serbian civilians in Kosovo, works with KFOR to ensure that people of all
ethnicities will be protected.
- More than 13,000 Serbian civilians have fled through
Montenegro, saying they feel they have no future in Kosovo.
- Several hundred refugees return spontaneously from Albania
and the FYR of Macedonia as Yugoslav forces continue to withdraw.
- A total of 953 refugees in the FYR of Macedonia depart
under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International Organization for
Migration, bringing the overall total to 85,400.
- The estimated number of Kosovo Albanian refugees and
displaced people in the region is 778,300, including 69,700 in Montenegro, 242,300 in the
FYR of Macedonia and 444,600 in Albania.
DEVELOPMENTS
UNHCR is deeply concerned by the departure of thousands of
Serbians from Kosovo. We are witnessing the same pattern of displacement of Serbs seen in
December 1991 in Western Slavonia, in August 1995 in the Krajina and in Sarajevo after the
December 1995 Dayton agreement.
The High Commissioners Special Envoy, Dennis
McNamara, discussed on Monday the outflow of Serbian civilians with Lieutenant General
Mike Jackson, the Kosovo Force (KFOR) commander. The general confirmed that his troops
will do their best to provide security for all of Kosovos citizens, but stressed
that under the circumstances, there is unfortunately a limit to what can be done.
UNHCR is also talking both to the Kosovo Liberation Army
and the Serbian leadership in Kosovo. UNHCR will do whatever it can to stabilize the
situation in Kosovo but tensions are high and regrettably more departures are likely.
Serbs arriving in Montenegro say they fear reprisals and
are uncertain of their future in Kosovo. UNHCR is using both local radio and international
networks to send out the message that KFOR troops deploying in Kosovo will provide
security for all people, regardless of ethnicity.
KOSOVO
On the second full day after UNHCRs return to
Kosovo, teams fanned out Tuesday inside the southeastern Serbian province to look at
conditions in and around Pristina, in Glogovac and in Prizren near the border with
Albania. UNHCR is planning to reopen its satellite office in Prizren today if security
permits. From there, UNHCR used to dispatch food convoys to villages in southwestern
Kosovo.
Another team, accompanied by medics, returned to Glogovac,
30 kilometers west of Pristina, where on Monday a multi-agency convoy brought food and
other relief supplies for 20,000 people who had reportedly swollen the towns
original population of 4,000.
Also on Tuesday, a third convoy of 45 vehicles, including
22 trucks carrying relief aid, set out from Skopje in the FYR of Macedonia to Kosovo.
As of Tuesday, UNHCR will have 41 staff in Kosovo
19 expatriates and 22 nationals.
On Monday in Glogovac, the UNHCR team said there was an
air of apprehension among the people there. Mostly children went out to see the convoy and
there was a notable absence of men there. The displaced said that no assistance had
reached them for two and a half months and they had been left to scrounge for food in the
hills. UNICEF reported that several thousand people, especially children, would need
special nutritional attention.
Glogovac was one of the last places in Kosovo where UNHCR
led aid convoys before its staff were evacuated on the eve of the NATO strike against
Yugoslavia on 24 March. Thousands of IDPs had then flooded into Glogovac as Serbian troops
went on the offensive against the KLA in the Drenica region in central Kosovo.
UNHCR expects more people will come out of hiding in the
Glogovac area once word spreads around that aid workers are back.
KFOR officials reported that it was relatively quiet
overnight in Kosovo. In Lipljan, 25 kilometers south of Pristina, one person who stepped
off the concrete pavement was killed by a land mine, underscoring the dangers facing those
contemplating return. There have also been reports of abductions, shootings and looting.
On the way to Glogovac on Monday, UNHCR staff saw houses burning and even in Pristina some
houses were on fire.
ALBANIA
More than 1,500 refugees came up to Kukes from southern
areas of Albania, hoping to return to Kosovo. Several hundred refugees gathered Monday at
the Morini crossing. Initially they were prevented from proceeding to Kosovo by border
checkpoints established by the Albanians, the KLA and the German KFOR contingent.
Because some of the refugees were heading for the
mountains to get inside Kosovo, risking the danger of stepping on land mines, the Germans
decided late Monday to let them through as tensions eased on the Kosovo side.
However, UNHCR continues to urge refugees not to rush back
into Kosovo until the withdrawal of Yugoslav troops has been completed, and KFOR has been
fully deployed. Reporters returning from Prizren said on Tuesday the situation there
remains unstable.
FYR of MACEDONIA
More than 350 refugees, driving cars and most of whom
carried valid Yugoslav passports, went back into Kosovo on Monday through the official FYR
of Macedonia immigration control at Blace.
Despite these spontaneous returns, there is no indication
that refugees in the FYR of Macedonia are planning to return immediately in large numbers
to Kosovo. An information campaign urging people to remain until their safety can be
better assured has been going on there since last week.
A UNHCR team that visited the Kosovo border town of
Kacanik on Monday reported that of the towns pre-war population of 45,000 people,
only about 1,500 remained. Many houses there had been looted and vandalized.
MONTENEGRO
Police said 2,884 Serbs crossed the Montenegrin border
town of Rozaje on Monday, bringing the number of persons of Serb or Montenegrin origin who
had fled Kosovo into Montenegro in the last five days to more than 13,300.
The new arrivals told UNHCR they were apprehensive about
their future in Kosovo and decided to leave. A steady stream of cars, tractor-trailers and
trucks filled with furniture and television sets has been seen crossing into Rozaje in the
last several days.
Most of them proceeded to the houses of friends and
relatives in Montenegro and others went on to Serbia. A few called UNHCR requesting help
with accommodation. The Montenegrin Red Cross is providing assistance to the arrivals
similar to that extended to the displaced Kosovars.
UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
A total of 953 refugees in the FYR of Macedonia departed
on Monday under the UNHCR-IOM humanitarian evacuation program, bringing the total to
85,403.
Destinations included France, Germany, Sweden, the United
Kingdom and the United States.
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