http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 24 June 1999
Kosovo Crisis Update 24 June 1999

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AT A GLANCE
  • UNHCR prepares to begin organized returns to specific locations in Kosovo where KFOR agrees that basic security conditions for return are met.
     
  • Around 34,500 Kosovars return on 23 June from Albania, the FYR of Macedonia and Montenegro, pushing to more than a quarter of a million the overall number of returnees in just nine days.
     
  • The number of Kosovo Albanian refugees and displaced people in the region drops to 524,000, including 65,700 in Montenegro, 142,100 in the FYR of Macedonia, 294,500 in Albania and 21,700 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

KOSOVO

Dennis McNamara, UNHCR Special Envoy for the former Yugoslavia and Albania, said organized returns to Urosevac, Prizren and Pristina could begin as early as next week from the FYR of Macedonia and Albania.

The precondition for this has been an understanding reached with KFOR, the international security force in Kosovo, that the security conditions for the commencement of organized return exist in these three destinations.

UNHCR staff in camps in Albania and the FYR of Macedonia are identifying refugees who wish to take advantage of the offer of transport assistance from UNHCR and its partners. Refugees will be told that they must be from the specific town selected for return because the necessary conditions for organized return are currently in place only in those areas.

Organized movements to other areas will follow as the basic requirements for a safe and sustainable return are met in each locale. Those requirements include first and foremost a secure environment as well as an established international presence by UNHCR and its NGO partners, the availability shelter and of food and other assistance for the returnees.

Less than two weeks after its return to Kosovo as lead humanitarian agency, UNHCR has established offices in five of seven designated towns across Kosovo, including the three chosen for the initial organized returns. Hundeds of tons of supplies have been delivered to Kosovo, and a regular supply and distribution system to the different parts of the province is being put in place. Seven out of eight planned distribution centers are up and running.

Despite the dangers posed by mines and other security threats and the frequently very difficult conditions in their home areas, more than 250,000 refugees have spontaneously returned to Kosovo. This underscores the intense desire of Kosovars to start rebuilding their lives as quickly as possible.

On Wednesday, UNHCR sent convoys from Skopje to three distribution centers inside Kosovo. They ferried mattresses, blankets and tents. Five trucks went to Pec, five to Urosevac and three to Prizren. On Thursday, two trucks are proceeding to Urosevac carrying 95 tents, 350 rolls of plastic sheeting, 250 mattresses and 350 blankets.

ALBANIA

More than 150,000 Kosovars have returned home from Albania since June 15. On Wednesday, 15,500 went back through Morini, the main crossing into Kosovo, and another 1,000 through nearby Qafe Prushit. As in past days, most of the returnees went to the municipalities of Prizren, Suva Reka and Gora.

AFOR, the international security force in Albania, on Wednesday began a 24-hour presence at Morini. UNHCR will now henceforth also operate round the clock there. Hitherto UNHCR staff have been at Morini from 4 a.m. to 9 p.m.

UNHCR is distributing an assistance package to refugees returning from Albania consisting of a one month food supply and non-food items. Returnees to Kosovo from southern and central Albania are being told about this on reaching Kukes, to ensure that they also benefit. During the daytime this assistance is available at the Morini crossing; at nightime it is distributed at a way-station in Kukes town.

FYR of MACEDONIA

Around 15,200 refugees returned to Kosovo from the FYR of Macedonia on Wednesday — 7,800 through the main crossing at Blace, 6,800 at Jazince and 600 at Tabanovce. So far, a total of 97,600 Kosovars have gone back home from the FYR of Macedonia.

On Thursday, 1,600 refugees left in the early morning and large numbers were once again expected to follow during the day.

On Wednesday, around 1,000 ethnic Albanians from the Presevo area of Serbia proper tried to return home through an unofficial border crossing near Lojane, since they were not in possession of travel documents. Because of the danger of land mines, the Macedonian border guards turned them back and directed them to use official crossing points. UNHCR staff from Belgrade have been dispatched to the border to facilitate the entry of this group into Serbia.

UNHCR is meanwhile also looking into the condition of 800-1,000 Serbs, mostly women and children, in Bitola. Aid workers say they came to the FYR of Macedonia because of the worsening economic situation in Serbia.

MONTENEGRO

Some 3,900 Kosovars left Montenegro for Kosovo on Wednesday, including 1,000 who said they were going to check on the conditions in their home areas before deciding if they want to go back permanently.

The border crossing at Rozaje was busy with 100 vehicles passing each hour at the peak of the departures. Police escorted two convoys which transported 2,400 displaced Kosovars in 14 vehicles and 300 cars from Ulcinj, where most of the displaced are sheltered.

The returns went smoothly except for one incident at Berane in Rozaje when civilians threw rocks and slightly injured a man and a woman.

A small group of Kosovo Serbs arrived at Berane Wednesday. UNHCR provided them with relief aid. Aid workers are looking for accommodation for them.

UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM

On Wednesday, 95 refugees in the FYR of Macedonia left for France under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration, bringing the total departures to 88,607.
 

KOSOVO DISPLACEMENT STATISTICS

Information as at 24 June 1999, 08:00 GMT

Figures in Tables 1a and 1b are estimates, rounded to the nearest hundred.
 

Table 1a: Kosovo Albanian displacement and return
 
 

Returns to Kosovo

Remaining
in country

June 23

Cumulative

F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Montenegro

2,800

4,000

65,700

Former Yugoslav Republic of  Macedonia

15,200

97,600

142,100

Albania

16,500

150,100 (2)

294,500

Bosnia-Herzegovina (1)

21,700

TOTAL

34,500

251,700

524,000

Notes:
(1) Also displaced by conflict from other parts of FRY before the peace settlement: 22,500 from Sandzak in the Federation, and 30,900 ethnic Serbs (mainly former Croatian and Bosnian refugees in FRY) in RS.

(2) Also includes previously unreported returns via Qaf-e-Prushit 22 June.

Table 1b: Ethnic Serb displacement from Kosovo

 

Numbers Displaced

June 23

Cumulative

F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Montenegro

160

    19,500 (1)
F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Serbia

na

50,000 

Former Yugoslav Republic of  Macedonia

TOTAL

160

69,500

Notes:
(1) Of whom some 8,700 have moved on to Serbia,
 

Table 2: UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program of Kosovar refugees 
from the FYR of Macedonia 5 April through 23 June 1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
 

Receiving Country

Arrivals

23 June

Total 

Australia 3,534
Austria 5,080
Belgium 1,223
Canada 5,350
Croatia 370
Czech Republic 824
Denmark  2,823
Finland 958
France 95 6,147
Germany 14,726
Iceland 70
Ireland 1,038
Israel 206
Italy 5,829
Luxembourg 101
Malta 105
Netherlands 4,067
Norway 6,070
Poland 1,049
Portugal 1,271
Romania 41
Slovakia 90
Slovenia 745
Spain 1,426
Sweden 3,675
Switzerland 1,687
Turkey 8,142
United Kingdom 4,191
United States 7,769
TOTAL 95 88,607
Receiving country governments: please check the total for your country and notify any corrections to the UNHCR Kosovo Emergency Operations Cell:

Telephone: +41 22 739 8000
Fax: +41 22 739 7330
Email:hqemops@unhcr.ch

Table 3: Asylum applications lodged by citizens of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (mainly Kosovars) since 1998 (monthly provisional and annual figures) last updated: 22 June 1999

 

1998

1999

Asylum Country

Total

Country
share

Jan

Feb

Mar

Apr

May

Total

Country
share

Austria

6,600

6.7%

565

615

516

700

1,340

3,736

7.8%

Belgium

6,100

6.2%

646

567

697

797

1,045

3,752

7.8%

Bulgaria

20

0.0%

5

80

149

109

343

0.7%

Czech Republic

710

0.7%

105

70

140

114

158

587

1.2%

Denmark

370

0.4%

94

50

115

110

155

524

1.1%

Finland

360

0.4%

3

12

24

20

59

0.1%

France

1,300

1.3%

122

113

88

143

466

1.0%

Germany (1)

35,000

35.6%

2,861

2,519

2,736

2,099

2,808

13,023

27.2%

Greece

10

0.0%

Hungary

3,300

3.4%

463

305

647

1,040

1,014

3,469

7.2%

Iceland

10

0.0%

Ireland

140

0.1%

13

17

20

16

21

87

0.2%

Italy

2,600

2.6%

Liechtenstein

220

0.2%

72

56

128

0.3%

Luxembourg

1,400

1.4%

205

200

153

298

734

1,590

3.3%

Netherlands

4,300

4.4%

341

233

233

245

488

1,540

3.2%

Norway

1,600

1.6%

89

109

73

91

116

478

1.0%

Poland

420

0.4%

8

20

22

44

94

0.2%

Portugal

10

0.0%

Romania

10

0.0%

0

6

13

220

116

355

0.7%

Slovakia

50

0.1%

9

19

30

5

3

66

0.1%

Slovenia (2)

290

0.3%

33

36

47

76

39

231

0.5%

Spain

170

0.2%

10

6

25

33

24

98

0.2%

Sweden

3,500

3.6%

207

193

178

230

216

1,024

2.1%

Switzerland

20,400

20.7%

2,251

2,436

2,317

2,018

3,827

12,849

26.8%

United Kingdom (3)

9,500

9.7%

909

710

966

883

3,469

7.2%

Totals

98,390

100.0%

8,939

8,236

9,120

9,403

12,269

47,968

100.0%

 

Notes
1999 statistics are provisional, subject to change.
A dash ("–") indicates that the figure is not available.
(1) Germany: excluding "re-opened" cases.
(2) Slovenia: excluding applications for Temporary Protection (892 in April, 1,004 in May, all by Kosovo Albanians).
(3) United Kingdom: number of persons estimated by UNHCR.

Source: governments, compiled by UNHCR.

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 24/06/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
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