http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 28 June 1999

Kosovo Crisis Update
28 June 1999


UNHCRLogo.gif (30541 bytes)  

 

AT A GLANCE
  • UNHCR begins organized return of Kosovar refugees; brings more than 300 back to Pristina from camps in the FYR of Macedonia
     
  • Over a three-day period, Friday through Sunday, a total of 116,500 refugees returned spontaneously to Kosovo from Albania, the FYR of Macedonia, Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina, bringing the overall count of spontaneous returnees to 415,900.
     
  • The estimated number of Kosovar refugees and displaced people in the region has dropped to 342,400, including 45,900 in Montenegro, 67,200 in the FYR of Macedonia, 208,300 in Albania and 21,000 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

ORGANIZED REPATRIATION

Two weeks after UNHCR returned to Kosovo, the agency began the organized repatriation of refugees, taking more than 300 back from camps in the FYR of Macedonia to their homes in Pristina.

The 325 returnees, from Stenkovec 1 & 2 camps north of Skopje, made the return trip aboard buses organized by UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration.

"Returning refugees is always the most satisfying part of our work," said Dennis McNamara, UNHCR’s special envoy for the Former Yugoslavia and Albania. "But it is also a major challenge when you have a large refugee population like this one that is so anxious to return home. In just two weeks, we’ve had to rebuild our program from scratch and get all of the necessary pieces in place to begin official returns."

Of some 800,000 refugees in regional asylum countries at the beginning of June, more than half have already gone home on their own, marking one of the fastest spontaneous returns of refugees seen by UNHCR in decades. The early returns occurred despite words of caution from UNHCR, KFOR and others that refugees faced an uncertain security situation, heavy damage in many areas and the lack of an international support system. Dozens have been wounded or killed by mines and many have returned to find their towns and villages destroyed.

KOSOVO

UNHCR has distributed around 700 tents to returnees in the western town of Pec over the last four days. Hundreds of returning refugees and displaced people are queuing daily at UNHCR’s newly opened office in Pec, seeking shelter materials and underscoring the need for accommodation.

Medical workers from Médecins Sans Frontières and local Albanians have begun to operate the Pec hospital, just weeks after it was abandoned by its Serbian staff. The hospital reported that in the last week it treated eight people injured in land mine accidents of whom two men later died.

UNHCR is looking into the condition of Serbs who remain in Kosovo. On Sunday, UNHCR visited an Orthodox monastery in Pec and found that about 100 displaced Serbs were sheltered there. UNHCR is sending relief items to the monastery. Upon request from one of the displaced persons there, a UNHCR team found and brought to the monastery three elderly Serbs who felt threatened by their Albanian neighbors.

UNHCR also has been looking into the situation of the Krajina Serb refugees in Kosovo. Before the NATO action, it was estimated that 5,000 -7,000 Krajina Serb refugees were staying in Kosovo. Many are believed to have left. Several hundred Krajina refugees have been located and interviewed. Eighty percent of them have asked for help to leave Kosovo. UNHCR plans to transport them into Serbia proper, from where the refugees could then make a decision about whether to opt for repatriation to Croatia, settlement in Serbia or resettlement in a third country.

Tension remained high in many parts of Kosovo during the period 25-27 June. On Friday alone, 14 people, mostly Serbs, were reportedly killed in Pristina, mainly in sniping incidents. One of the dead was a professor from Pristina University, three of whose colleagues were killed on Thursday, and who had turned down an offer of protection from KFOR.

UNHCR staff in southern Kosovo have conducted initial assessments in more than 35 villages in Prizren, Djakovica and Suva Reka. Prizren itself is coming back to life at an astonishing pace, with shops and cafes re-opening every day. The town is a magnet for rural returnees who have found their villages uninhabitable. For now, those who have no homes to go to are being taken in and assisted by others, but this generosity may prove difficult to sustain as the number of returnees rises.

The main problems in Prizren concern the minorities remaining there: Serbs and Roma. Serb-owned apartments are being occupied, at least two Serbs have been murdered and around 60 people, mainly Serbs, remain holed up in a seminary in the town center under KFOR guard. It is not clear how many Serbs remain in Prizren altogether.

Djakovica and Suva Reka are much harder hit than Prizren, with commercial premises extensively damaged and looted or burned. An entire section of the historic old town was burned down as was the town’s oldest mosque. Suva Reka is even less well off, in particular in terms of revival of commerce. The situation in the villages varies enormously. Some have limited damage. In others, destruction appears to have been arbitrary and brutal. In the village of Budokova, east of Suva Reka for instance, there does not appear to be a single undamaged house — only 50 of the village’s original 220 families have returned.

FYR of MACEDONIA

A total of 39,600 refugees from the FYR of Macedonia returned to Kosovo from Friday through Sunday, bringing the departures from that country to date to over 155,000.

On Monday, as spontaneous movements continued, UNHCR took 325 refugees back to Pristina by bus, in UNHCR’s first repatriation convoy.

UNHCR continues to run aid convoys from Skopje to Kosovo ferrying tents, plastic sheeting, blankets, mattresses, bottled water and hygienic kits.

On Friday, six trucks went to Pristina, five to Pec and four to Prizren. Deliveries were made on Friday from UNHCR’s Pristina warehouse to Djakova, Glogovac, Malisevo and Mitrovica, including shelter repair kits and hygienic items.

Saturday, five UNHCR trucks went to Prizren, two to Pristina and five to Pec. At the same time three trucks came into Skopje to replenish stocks of mattresses. On Sunday, four UNHCR trucks went to Urosevac, five to Prizren, five to Pec and 12 to Pristina.

On Monday, UNHCR Skopje sent five trucks to Pec and hopes to dispatch 25 trucks on Tuesday to different destinations in Kosovo. There are also eight incoming trucks of supplies to Skopje on Monday.

ALBANIA

Around 60,500 refugees from Albania returned to Kosovo over the past three days, bringing the overall returns since 15 June to 236,300. Most of the returnees are coming from camps and host families in southern and central Kosovo. UNHCR plans to begin organized repatriation from Albania on Tuesday.

MONTENEGRO

In the past three days, 15,705 Kosovars returned to Kosovo from Montenegro, pushing to 21,500 the overall total since spontaneous departures began on 21 June. The Yugoslav army remains at the border posts, but the returns have been going smoothly except for one incident in which a Kosovar man was kicked and had his documents confiscated. The man later reported the incident to police.

UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM

On Sunday, 48 refugees left the FYR of Macedonia for Canada under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration. So far, 90,030 have departed under the program.

Participants in the program have agreed to suspend it in the coming days, and staff in Skopje are concentrating on resolving the cases of over 300 refugees in need of medical treatment abroad.
 

KOSOVO DISPLACEMENT STATISTICS

Information as at 28 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 26

June 27

Cumulative

F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Montenegro

5,600

5,100

23,800

45,900

Former Yugoslav Republic of  Macedonia

13,100

11,000

155,100

     67,200 (2)

Albania

22,300

18,400

236,300

208,300

Bosnia-Herzegovina (1)

700

na

700

21,000

TOTAL

41,700

34,500

415,900

342,400

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) Revised figure for refugees remaining in the FYR of Macedonia based on UNHCR recount of camp population.

Table 1b: Ethnic Serb displacement from Kosovo 

 

Numbers Displaced

June 26

June 27

Cumulative

F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Montenegro

234

631     21,200 (1)
F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Serbia

na

na

50,000 

Former Yugoslav Republic of  Macedonia

TOTAL

234

631

71,200

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 25 June 1999
  

Receiving Country

Total Arrivals

Australia 3,969
Austria 5,079
Belgium 1,223
Canada 5,350
Croatia 370
Czech Republic 824
Denmark  2,823
Finland 958
France 6,244
Germany 14,689
Iceland 70
Ireland 1,033
Israel 206
Italy 5,829
Luxembourg 101
Malta 105
Netherlands 4,060
Norway 6,072
Poland 1,049
Portugal 1,271
Romania 41
Slovakia 90
Slovenia 745
Spain 1,426
Sweden 3,675
Switzerland 1,687
Turkey 8,340
United Kingdom 4,311
United States 8,549
TOTAL 90,189

 

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 update28/06/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
Kosovo Index Page
Web Genocide Documentation Centre Index Page
Holocaust Index Page
ESS Home Page