http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 2 July 1999
Kosovo Crisis Update 2 July
1999
AT A GLANCE
- High Commissioner Sadako Ogata will visit Kosovo on Monday
her fourth trip to the Serbian province since the conflict started last year and
the first since UNHCR resumed operations there on June 13.
- UNHCR Special Envoy Dennis McNamara expresses dismay that
while governments have spent billions of dollars on military operations in Kosovo, UNHCR
has virtually no funds to ensure the safe return of refugees.
- The international security force in Kosovo, KFOR, has given
UNHCR a green light to begin organized returns of refugees to major urban centers other
than the three designated earlier.
- Around 580 refugees crossed the border into Kosovo on
Friday in the first organized repatriation from Albania.
- On Thursday, 5,967 refugees returned from the FYR of
Macedonia, including 393 in buses provided by UNHCR and the International Organization for
Migration. Altogether, 23,000 refugees returned to Kosovo on 1 July.
- Since 15 June, nearly 534,000 Kosovars have returned to
Kosovo; around 233,000 remain in the region, including 30,300 in Montenegro, 38,900 in
Macedonia, 142,900 in Albania and 21,000 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
NEWS CONFERENCE BY UNHCRS SPECIAL ENVOY
Special envoy Dennis McNamara told a Geneva news
conference Friday that while governments had spent billions of dollars on military
operations in Kosovo, UNHCR had virtually no funds to ensure the safe return of hundreds
of thousands of refugees.
McNamara said the situation of minority Serbs and Roma in
Kosovo remained "precarious and difficult" and that a dangerous gap was
developing between the "emergency" phase of the Kosovo operation and the urgent
need to begin permanent reconstruction and establish an effective civilian rule of law,
including a functioning judiciary, a police force and a prison system.
"I find it incredible that after a hugely expensive
conflict in Europe, UNHCR has to keep on saying we have no money" to help hundreds of
thousand of refugees and internally displaced people produced by the crisis, McNamara
said. UNHCR has budgeted a "modest" $10 million a week for its Kosovo operation
and still needed $234 million for its activities in the region for the rest of 1999.
He called the return in the last two weeks of an estimated
523,000 refugees "one of the most dramatic and spontaneous returns in recent
history" and said the Kosovars were the "most return-oriented group of refugees
in any recent conflict" but added that the plight of Serbs and Roma (Gypsies) in
Kosovo remained precarious and extremely difficult and they were under constant attack
despite the efforts of KFOR to protect them.
He said that UNHCR would help at least some of the
remaining 5,000 ethnic Serb refugees from Croatia who came to Kosovo after being expelled
from the Krajina region several years ago, to leave Kosovo if they so wished.
Anecdotal evidence suggested that there were probably
fewer internally displaced people in Kosovo than the earlier estimate of 500,000 Kosovars
who remained inside the province during the air war, but who fled to nearby hills and
mountains to escape Serb paramilitaries and army. McNamara said that many of these had
already returned to their homes and during a recent helicopter tour of the province
"we didnt see any large groups staying out in the open."
Still, their needs for emergency supplies of food and
shelter, remained more critical in many cases than for the returning refugees. McNamara
said that while the emergency phase of the return was progressing, a worrying gap had
developed between immediate relief operations and more long-term programs such as
permanent reconstruction and the establishment of civil structures, include a court
system, prisons and a functioning police force.
"The re-establishment of civil society should be in
the front line with emergency humanitarian relief," McNamara said.
KOSOVO
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Sadako
Ogata, will pay a two-day visit to Kosovo beginning on Monday. She will accompany a convoy
of returnees from Skopje, in the FYR of Macedonia, to Pristina.
The visit is Mrs. Ogatas fourth since the conflict
in Kosovo broke out in the spring of 1998 and the first since UNHCR returned to the
Serbian province on 13 June. UNHCR was coordinating assistance for 400,000 people in
Kosovo before the conflict worsened on 24 March, prompting the evacuation of its staff.
Since its return, UNHCR has expanded its operations in
Kosovo, opening seven offices and sending mobile teams to conduct assessments and aid
convoys to severely damaged areas. As at 1 July, UNHCR staff in the province totalled 104,
including 58 expatriates. The figure is 20 more than UNHCR had before the war broke out in
March.
Meanwhile, KFOR has told UNHCR in a meeting earlier this
week that the principal urban centers in the province and all major roads can be regarded
as secure enough to allow organized transport of returning refugees. Previously, KFOR had
made this statement only for Pristina, Prizren and Urosevac, and UNHCR has been
repatriating refugees to these places since 28 June. The commencement of organized returns
to the other four urban centers where UNHCR has a presence will depend on the capacity of
these areas to absorb returnees.
ALBANIA
Around 580 refugees crossed the Morini immigration control
on Friday in the first organized repatriation from Albania.
Most of the refugees originated from camps in Durres and
Elbasen in central Albania and went by train on Wednesday to the railhead at Mjeda outside
Shkodra, where they overnighted. They then proceeded by bus to the northern border town of
Kukes, where they spent the night before moving into to Kosovo Friday morning. A third
group of 47 refugees arrived in two buses on Thursday night in Kukes from Fier and also
left this morning bound for Urosevac.
The first convoy to cross Morini on Friday at 7:30 a.m.
headed for Pristina and consisted 133 refugees in three buses followed by eight trucks
carrying their belongings.
The group of 47 bound for Urosevac followed in one bus and
three trucks.
The last convoy was made up of 392 refugees crossing
Morini at around 11 a.m. heading for Prizren in 11 buses and 16 trucks of the Italian and
Greek contingents of AFOR, the Albanian international security force in Albania.
Spontaneous departures continued out of Albania. On
Thursday, 14,711 returned home on their own, bringing the total spontaneous departures
since 15 June to 301,100. Around 142,000 refugees remain in Albania.
FYR of MACEDONIA
On Thursday, UNHCR and IOM transported 393 returnees from
the FYR of Macedonia 246 to Pristina and 147 to Urosevac. On Friday, 560 refugees
are joining the UNHCR-IOM convoys to Kosovo, including the first returns to Gnjilane.
The supply run from Skopje continued on Thursday with 42
trucks carrying relief to Kosovo from various agencies 4 trucks to went to
Urosevac, 6 to Prizren, 12 to Pec, 15 to Pristina and 5 to Pec.
MONTENEGRO
A total of 2,630 Kosovars returned spontaneously from
Montenegro to Kosovo on Thursday. On Friday, a huge convoy of returnees set out from the
coastal town of Ulcinj bound for Kosovo. More than 39,600 Kosovors have returned in the
last two weeks from Montenegro.
Also on Thursday, 71 non-Albanians from Kosovo entered
Montenegro, of whom 67 Roma and 4 Montenegrins, bringing the overall non-Albanian arrivals
to 21,500. About half of the arrivals have proceeded to Serbia proper. Arrivals of Serbs
from Kosovo in Serbia proper are estimated at between 50,000 and 70,000.
|
KOSOVO DISPLACEMENT
STATISTICS Information as at 2 July 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 |
July 1 |
Cumulative
|
F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Montenegro |
2,600 |
39,600 |
30,300 |
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia |
6,000 |
183,200
|
38,900 |
Albania |
14,700 |
301,100
|
142,900
|
Bosnia-Herzegovina (1) |
na |
na |
21,000
|
TOTAL |
23,300 |
523,900
|
233,100
|
(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.
Table 1b: Ethnic Serb displacement from Kosovo
|
Numbers
Displaced |
June 30/July 1 |
Cumulative
|
F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Montenegro |
135 |
21,500 (1) |
F.R. of Yugoslavia - Republic of Serbia |
na |
50,000 |
Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia |
|
|
TOTAL |
135 |
71,500 |
(1) Of whom some 8,800 have moved on to Serbia,
Table 2: UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program of
Kosovar refugees
from the FYR of Macedonia 5 April through 1 July 1999
Receiving
Country |
Total
Arrivals |
Australia |
3,969 |
Austria |
5,080 |
Belgium |
1,223 |
Canada |
5,438 |
Croatia |
370 |
Czech Republic |
824 |
Denmark |
2,823 |
Finland |
958 |
France |
6,339 |
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 |
4,346 |
United States |
9,198 |
TOTAL |
91,057 |
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.
|
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