Source: http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 09 July 1999

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Kosovo Crisis Update 9 July 1999

AT A GLANCE
 
 

Returns to Kosovo

Remaining
in country

July 8

Cumulative

Montenegro 1,200 

50,500

19,400

FYR of Macedonia 1,600 

211,300 

10,800

Albania 7,800 

374,000 

69,400

Bosnia-Herzegovina na

3,600

17,400

TOTAL 10,600 

639,400 

117,000

  • Preliminary results of a survey of 141 of Kosovo’s 2,000 villages show that 64 percent of the housing stock in the villages covered suffered severe damage or complete destruction during the war.
  •   Around 100,000 Serbs and Roma (Gypsies) who fled Kosovo since the deployment of KFOR need urgent assistance before the onset of winter.
  •  
  • Around 10,600 Kosovars returned on Thursday to Kosovo from neighboring territories, raising to 639,400 the overall count of returns since 15 June.
  •  
  • The estimated number of Kosovo refugees and displaced people in the region is 117,000, including 19,400 in Montenegro, 10,800 in the FYR of Macedonia, 69,400 in Albania and 17,400 in Bosnia-Herzegovina.

KOSOVO

Preliminary results of a survey of 141 of 2,000 villages in central Kosovo show that 64 percent of the housing stock in the areas assessed suffered severe damage or complete destruction.

UNHCR, with help from scores of NGOs, international organizations, UN agencies and KFOR, began conducting the survey a week after it resumed operations in Kosovo.

The results show that although more than 600,000 Kosovars have returned from neighboring territories, thousands have not been able to return to their homes of origin. Of those questioned who have not gone back to their original homes, 76 percent cited damage to their dwellings as the reason for their continued displacement; 31 percent mentioned lack of access to food and other basic needs; just 7 percent pointed to insecurity or fear.

Results from the 141 villages reveal that 64 percent of the housing stock in those areas suffered severe damage or complete destruction. Another 20 percent sustained slight or moderate damage. Of the villages surveyed, 102 were also part of a January 1999 assessment. Comparing data from the previous survey done by UNHCR indicates a twofold increase in severely damaged homes and a near tripling of those destroyed since March.

The level of destruction in Kosovo is extremely varied. Some areas, such as the ones surveyed, are heavily destroyed. Others were barely touched.

Obviously, shelter assistance in the heavily impacted zones is of major importance. To meet emergency shelter needs, UNHCR is bringing in 30,000 tents, 15,000 tent stoves, 183,333 plastic sheets, more than 20,000 shelter repair kits and tons of other building materials ranging from timber to door and window frames to roofing material. But longer term rehabilitation is urgently needed, requiring other organizations specialized in long-term development to start reconstruction work before winter begins.

Food availability has been dramatically reduced over the past three months as shops were looted or destroyed and farm production ground to a halt. Wheat was available in just 35 percent of the 141 villages; oil in 28 percent; sugar in 23 percent; fruit in 18 percent, coffee in 12 percent and meat in 7 percent.

About 40 percent of water sources are contaminated, many by household rubbish or animal and human remains. Eighty-eight percent of the surveyed villages lacked functioning health facilities and more than half of the facilities surveyed were completely destroyed or sustained severe damage.

So far, UNHCR has supplied 7,365 tents; 28,948 plastic sheets; 248,995 blankets; 132,336 mattresses; 148,152 hygiene kits; more than 2 tons of soap and 3,010 kitchen sets.

MINORITIES

Despite repeated appeals by UNHCR and other agencies, attacks on Serb and Roma minorities in Kosovo continue.

Seventy eight Roma people arrived at the Macedonian border crossing at Blace on Thursday after fleeing from Lipljan and other nearby areas south of Pristina. In Montenegro, 200 Roma have arrived in the port of Bar by train since 2 July. They came from Pristina, Pec and Kosovska Mitrovica.

Ethnic Albanian youths armed with rocks attacked a Serb household in Urosevac on Thursday after it refused demands to hand over its live rabbits, injuring a man and his wife, a UNHCR team from Skopje reported. The two were forced to seek refuge at the Urosevac clinic, where 30 elderly Serbs have encamped for eight nights waiting for international troops to escort them to Vranje in Serbia proper.

UNHCR staff report 21 Serb houses have been burned in Prizren in the past 48 hours. Around 360 Roma left their houses in Djakovica’s Brekovac area on Tuesday and gathered around the mined graveyard close to the town center. At least 14 houses have been torched at Brekovac and some Roma taken away by the Kosovo Liberation Army for interrogation. The group is asking to be evacuated to Montenegro.

In Prizren, there are still 130 Serbs in the Orthodox seminary at Bogoslavija, under German KFOR protection. Other Serbs from Prizren have moved to villages in the Strpce area, a Serb enclave on the road to Urosevac. Up to 10,000 Serbs are reportedly in this area.

The Serb community in Orahovac is also asking to be taken out of the area. Most of the Serbs have moved from surrounding villages to the upper part of the town where they live in a ghetto-like area under Dutch KFOR protection. Thirty to forty elderly Serb women are staying in the Orthodox church there and are very frightened.

FR of YUGOSLAVIA

UNHCR now estimates that around 100,000 people from Kosovo, mainly Serbs but also including Roma, have left Kosovo and sought safety in the FR of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) and are in urgent need of assistance

If emergency aid is not immediately provided to these people, 40 to 50 percent of whom are children under 16 years of age, UNHCR believes their situation could turn desperate when winter comes.

Many of them arrived with no possessions. Some came by tractor or, the few wealthier ones, by car. Many of the arrivals are staying with family and friends. Some are staying in 30 collective centers, mostly schools. These schools have to be vacated by August, when classes begin. No alternative arrangements are currently available.

In addition, some 40,000 of the 530,000 mainly ethnic Serb refugees from Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina who have been in the FR of Yugoslavia for years are still living in overcrowded collective centers, many of which are in dire need of repair and upgrading.

The current situation allows only ad hoc distribution of emergency items. Continued delivery of relief goods will largely depend upon what priority the international community gives to the needs of these displaced people.

War damage has created enormous logistical challenges for relief agencies operating in the FR of Yugoslavia, with current fuel shortages an ongoing problem.

FYR of MACEDONIA

Around 1,630 refugees returned from the FYR of Macedonia to Kosovo on Thursday, bringing the total returns to 211,300.

The Macedonian government is conducting a new registration of the remaining refugees living with host families, who are now believed to number around 15,000. UNHCR’s figure for the population remaining in the country will be revised accordingly when the exercise is completed.

A number of refugees who had gone into Kosovo are believed to have returned to the FYR of Macedonia, either to pick up their families or to remain, because they found that they have no homes to return to in Kosovo. For example on Thursday, 151 refugee card holders returned to Macedonia.

At Cegrane camp, 50 refugees with their children gathered in front of the UNHCR office holding placards saying "Don’t forget us." They were ethnic Albanian refugees from Presevo and Bujanovac, towns in Serbia proper. This group is among the 3,500 refugees remaining in Cegrane, once a bustling community of 40,000 people but which now looks like a ghost town.

UNHCR opened two new offices in Tetovo and Kumanovo this week to organize repatriation of refugees in host families and help those remaining there.

ALBANIA

Looters armed with automatic weapons have descended on refugee camps in central and southern Albania that have been abandoned since the repatriation movements began in mid-June.

UNHCR and its implementing partners have been moving relief supplies and equipment left behind in camps. Convoys carrying water and sanitation equipment, tents, plastic sheeting and generators are now heading into Kosovo.

On Tuesday, armed looters went to Dersnic camp in Korce but were repulsed by private security guards. AFOR troops have been deployed in the area to prevent looting. In Durres, as remaining refugees were consolidated into one camp, looters in tractor-wagons stripped empty camps of tents and equipment on Tuesday, as private security guards watched helplessly. In Elbasan, the Turkish camp has been sacked and set on fire.

Repatriation continued with 7,796 refugees returning on Thursday, including 993 who joined UNHCR’s convoys. So far, 374,000 refugees have returned from Albania, including 4,931 who went back with UNHCR’s help.

MONTENEGRO

UNHCR is organizing a second repatriation convoy from Montenegro on Friday. A total of 320 refugees went on UNHCR’s convoy of six buses from the coastal town of Ulcinj heading for Kosovo, where it is expected later in the day.

On Thursday, 1,204 Kosovars returned spontaneously to Kosovo, bringing the overall returns to 50,500.
 

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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