AT A GLANCE
- More than 50,000 refugees have returned to Kosovo from
Albania and the FYR of Macedonia over the past three days and more are heading out; UNHCR
appeals to professionals outside the province to return and help in rebuilding war-damaged
infrastructure.
- UNHCR team reports an aerial survey reveals widespread
destruction in western Kosovo, particularly in the key commercial towns of Pec and
Djakovica previously home to around 130,000 people.
- UNHCRs Assistant High Commissioner receives
assurances of support from the Kosovo Liberation Army of its humanitarian program in
Kosovo.
- The estimated number of Kosovo Albanian refugees and
displaced people is down to 725,700, including 69,700 in Montenegro, 226,700 in the FYR of
Macedonia, 407,600 in Albania and 21,700 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
DEVELOPMENTS
Assistant High Commissioner Soren Jessen-Petersen has
received assurances from the Kosovo Liberation Army leadership of full cooperation in
UNHCRs relief program in Kosovo.
The KLA also told the AHC that it will caution refugees in
the asylum countries against rushing to return to Kosovo until the province is declared
safe by KFOR, the international security force deployed there.
While UNHCR wants the refugees to return soon, it feels
that they must go back safely. This message is contained in UNHCRs information
campaign in the asylum countries. Many parts of Kosovo remain insecure, the withdrawal of
Yugoslav troops is still underway and there has been no thorough survey of the landmines
and unexploded ordnance which litter the countryside. UNHCR hopes that the situation will
improve quickly so that organized returns may begin soon.
Responding to Jessen-Petersens statement that it
would be a pity if peace in Kosovo began with an exodus of Kosovo Serbian civilians, the
KLA also said its members will act with restraint in dealing with the local Serbian
population. The KLA said it will let the international criminal tribunal deal with those
suspected of having committed war crimes or crimes against humanity.
During a three-day visit in Albania, Jessen-Petersen also
met with Albanian government officials.
On Thursday, he expressed gratitude to the Albanian
President for hosting the Kosovar refugees. He said that UNHCR will help mobilize economic
assistance to both Albania and the FYR of Macedonia to address the impact of the presence
of refugees in the two countries.
Jessen-Petersen returned Friday to Geneva after a weeklong
trip that earlier took him to the FYR of Macedonia.
KOSOVO
A UNHCR team on an aerial survey on Thursday reported
widespread destruction in western Kosovo with up to 40-50 percent of the houses reduced to
rubble and the key towns of Djakovica and Pec previously home to more than 130,000
people deserted.
UNHCRs shelter coordinator said it would need a
major effort to provide accommodations for the returnees and keep them warm in the coming
winter.
The team, led by UNHCRs Special Envoy Dennis
McNamara, set out around midday from Pristina aboard a helicopter provided by KFOR, the
international security force in Kosovo, and flew west toward the Albanian border town of
Kukes.
There were few people on the road between the southwestern
town of Prizren and Kukes, but the team saw a two to three kilometer queue of vehicles
heading for Albania, apparently to pick up family members left there. There was also a
similar column of vehicles heading into Kosovo from Kukes. Unlike the previous day, the
flow of vehicles on the road looked orderly with KFOR soldiers directing traffic.
The area between Djakovica and Pec appeared devastated and
empty. Djakovica used to be a lively commercial center with a pre-war population of
61,000; Pec was a cosmopolitan town of 68,000 at the foot of the Mountain of the Damned on
the route to Montenegro. Damage was extremely heavy in the region between the two towns
which traverses Decani municipality.
There was also evidence of displaced stragglers coming
down from the hills. The team could see improvised shelters the IDPs had constructed in
the remote valleys where they had stayed during the war.
McNamara said later UNHCR is calling seven mine clearance
teams from Bosnia to begin demarcation of possible minefields. He said KFOR has reported
there is a lot of unexploded ordnance in Kosovo and has given UNHCR a map of minefields as
well as the roads which so far have not been cleared for travel.
Meanwhile, UNHCR and WHO have expressed a need for more
medical staff. UNHCR is sending messages to asylum countries to identify Kosovo
professionals needed to rebuild the country doctors, engineers,
administrators, judges and lawyers. UNHCR had a similar program in Bosnia, where it tried
to facilitate returns of professionals needed in the rebuilding process.
FYR OF MACEDONIA
More than 7,000 refugees from the FYR of Macedonia
returned to Kosovo on Thursday, driving their vehicles and tractor-wagons, across the
official crossings. There was a long queue of 180 vehicles at the main immigration control
point at Blace at noon.
Over the past three days, a total of 13,500 refugees have
returned to Kosovo from the FYR of Macedonia.
Earlier Thursday, KFOR troops took two men wounded in an
attack Wednesday night on the Kosovo side of the border to the clinic at the Blace transit
center. One was a returnee. There were no details of the attack, but the men had gunshot
and shrapnel wounds.
Also on Thursday, UNHCR sent an assessment team from
Skopje to Urosevac, 30 kilometers north of the border inside Kosovo. The team reported war
damage was about 10 percent and mainly to government buildings. There was also a large
number of people in the area.
The team saw 700-800 Serbian civilians driving cars out of
Urosevac and apparently heading for Serbia in an orderly fashion.
UNHCR also continued its supply pipeline from Skopje to
Pristina, with a convoy loaded with aid from various agencies.
ALBANIA
Around 14,000 refugees left the northern Albanian border
town of Kukes on Thursday, bringing the overall count of departures in the past three days
to 37,000.
Cap Anamur camp has been shut down and the UAE camp is
almost empty. UNHCR plans to consolidate the remaining 11,000-12,000 refugees from the
three other camps with declining populations at the UAE facility. They represent about one
third of the original camp population in Kukes.
On Thursday, UNHCR began distributing to those going back
food for 30 days, jerrycans, blankets, plastic sheeting. A spot survey of 79 vehicles
showed many of the people leaving were heading for Prizren and the rest to Urosevac,
Glogovac and Lipljan. Some of those going to Prizren say they will stay there and see how
situation shapes up in their villages.
MONTENEGRO
Around 800 Serbian civilians arrived in the Montenegrin
border town of Rozaje on Thursday. So far, nearly 19,000 Serb civilians have left Kosovo
since the June 9 signing of a military arrangement implementing the peace agreement on
Kosovo.
On Thursday a group of Serbian civilians in 10 cars
attempted to go back to Pec, but turned back after police reported that a 16-year-old
Serbian boy was shot and killed at Kula, site of the first checkpoint into Kosovo that was
reportedly now manned by the Kosovo Liberation Army.
Around 1,000 Serbs who arrived in Montenegro earlier in
the week have gathered at Barane seeking to go back after talking with the Italian KFOR
contingent in Pec.
UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM
A total of 694 refugees in the FYR of Macedonia left on
Thursday under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International
Organization for Migration, bringing the overall count to 87,850.
Destinations were Canada, Croatia, Ireland and the United
States.
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