Source: http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 08 July 1999

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Kosovo Crisis Update 7 July 1999

AT A GLANCE
 
 

Returns to Kosovo

Remaining
in country

July 6

Cumulative

Montenegro 900

47,700

22,200

FYR of Macedonia 3,600

203,100

19,000

Albania 12,200

351,900

91,500

Bosnia-Herzegovina na

3,600

17,400

TOTAL 16,700

606,300

150,100

  • UNHCR and aid agencies begin moving out from Albania to Kosovo relief supplies and equipment from camps that have been emptied as a result of the rapid repatriation of refugees.
     
  • Pockets of besieged Serb and Roma minorities request 24-hour protection from KFOR or evacuation to Montenegro or Serbia.
     
  • Around 400 Kosovars join first organized repatriation from Montenegro, as spontaneous returns taper off.
     
  • Returns on Tuesday totalled 12,300, including 600 from Montenegro, 4,200 from the FYR of Macedonia and 7,500 from Albania; the overall count of returnees is 618,600.
     
  • The estimate of Kosovo refugees and displaced people remaining in the region is 137,800, including 21,600 in Montenegro, 14,800 in the FYR of Macedonia, 84,000 in Albania and 17,400 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

ALBANIA

UNHCR and its implementing partners on Wednesday began transporting to Kosovo relief supplies and equipment from camps that have been emptied as a result of the massive return of refugees to the Serbian province.

Convoys, escorted by police and troops of the international security force in Albania called AFOR, ferried tents, plastic sheets, water purification systems, tankers and sanitation equipment from camps in central Albania to Kosovo.

Amid fears of looting and bandit attacks, representatives of UN and other intergovernmental agencies, donor countries, NGOs and the Albanian government last week agreed to move out certain of the assets left behind in the camps, in order to be able to use these in Kosovo.

The meeting also agreed to consolidate the remaining refugees in a few camps and collective centers, and to repair ecological damage caused by the presence of large refugee camps.

Another 7,500 refugees returned from Albania on Tuesday, including 752 who joined organized convoys to Pristina, Prizren and Urosevac. AFOR aircraft and helicopters flew 356 refugees from camps in Korce in southeastern Albania to the northern border town of Kukes to board buses to Kosovo.

So far, 359,400 refugees have returned since 15 June. It is estimated that around 84,000 refugees remain in Albania.

KOSOVO

Small groups of Serb and Roma civilians have requested round-the-clock protection from KFOR, the international troops in Kosovo, or evacuation to Montenegro or to Serbia proper.

One group making such requests to UNHCR staff on Tuesday was in the area of Istok, near the western town of Pec. In one village, 54 Serbs said returning Kosovars had threatened to kill them and they wanted a 24-hour KFOR presence, otherwise they would leave. In another village, six Serbs and 11 Roma told UNHCR they preferred to go to Montenegro and asked for KFOR escort.

UNHCR has received similar requests for protection of Serb minorities in Djakovica and Orahovac. UNHCR staff visited Serbs living in the Strpce area on Tuesday. This area has become a sanctuary for Kosovo Serbs, with around 11,000 thought to be staying there. A climate of fear and uncertainy about the future reigned.

In Decane, KFOR troops rescued several Serbian children after their house was set on fire by unknown people after their parents left on an errand.

In addition to visiting besieged communities, UNHCR staff in Pec continued to distribute relief supplies. So far, UNHCR has distributed 3,000 tents in Pec, which was severely damaged during the war.

Tens of thousands of people have returned to Djakovica, an important commercial center near the border with Albania. It had a pre-war population of around 60,000 people. Local authorities say up to 90 percent of Djakovica’s population has returned, though UNHCR believes the number is somewhat lower.

Many of the surrounding villages have been destroyed during the war and people come daily to offices of aid agencies seeking assistance, mainly shelter materials.

Reports of land mine accidents in the Djakovica area persist. On Sunday, a land mine blast killed a child in a field where people had already been working without incident for some days.

FYR of MACEDONIA

Around 4,200 refugees returned from the FYR of Macedonia to Kosovo on Tuesday, including 186 who joined convoys of UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration.

So far, 207,300 refugees have returned since mid-June. The movement of people at the main border crossings is gradually returning to normal levels, with hundreds of travelers and businessmen coming and going every day.

UNHCR Skopje has kept the agency’s supply pipeline to Kosovo going delivering so far 7,400 tents, 29,000 rolls of plastic sheeting, 249,000 blankets, 132,000 mattresses, 148,000 hygienic kits and 3,000 kitchen sets.

MONTENEGRO

On Wednesday, 407 Kosovars joined UNHCR’s first repatriation convoy to Kosovo from Montenegro, traveling from the western coastal town of Ulcinj to Pec in 7 buses, 2 trucks and 17 cars.

Spontaneous returns continued. Even before the organized convoy left Ulcinj, 204 persons in 24 cars and 2 buses went on their own back to Kosovo.

On Tuesday, 600 Kosovars returned spontaneously, bringing the overall count of returnees from Montenegro at the end of Tuesday to 48,300.

UNHCR-IOM HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM

The Italian government flew 580 Kosovo refugees from Italy to Skopje on Tuesday and later sent them by bus to Gnjilane in the Serbian province where they arrived in the evening. The group were returning voluntarily.

UNHCR staff provided assistance to the group on arrival in Gnjilane and worked late into the night to transport some of them to neighboring villages.

The returnees from Italy were the first to come

Arrangements are being worked out to ensure that voluntary repatriation movements from Europe and other areas where Albanians back of the 91,000 refugees who had been flown from the FYR of Macedonia to third countries under the humanitarian evacuation program of UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration.were evacuated during the crisis take place in a planned and orderly manner.
 

UNHCR/IOM Humanitarian Evacuation Program of Kosovar refugees 
from the FYR of Macedonia 5 April through 6 July 1999
  
Receiving Country

Total Arrivals

Receiving Country

Total Arrivals

Receiving Country

Total Arrivals

Australia 3,969 Iceland 70 Romania 41
Austria 5,080 Ireland 1,033 Slovakia 90
Belgium 1,223 Israel 206 Slovenia 745
Canada 5,438 Italy 5,829 Spain 1,426
Croatia 370 Luxembourg 101 Sweden 3,675
Czech Rep. 824 Malta 105 Switzerland 1,687
Denmark  2,823 Netherlands 4,060 Turkey 8,340
Finland 958 Norway 6,072 UK 4,346
France 6,339 Poland 1,049 USA 9,198
Germany 14,689 Portugal 1,271 TOTAL 91,057


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 12/07/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
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