NUMBERS AT A GLANCE
|
Returns to
Kosovo |
Remaining
in country |
July 9-11 |
Cumulative
|
Montenegro (1) |
2,000 |
47,500 |
33,000 |
FYR of Macedonia (2) |
900 |
212,100
|
31,000 |
Albania |
17,500 |
398,000
|
44,500 |
Bosnia-Herzegovina |
na |
4,400 |
16,600 |
TOTAL |
20,400 |
662,000
|
125,900
|
(1)Montenegro:
cumulative figure revised to account for go-and-come-back border crossings; revised
remaining in country total from UNHCR Montenegro.
(2)FYR
of Macedonia: return figures henceforth comprise "green card" and UNHCR card
holders only; remaining population figure revised to take account of recount of refugees
staying with host families (current estimate 21,000, figure expected to rise as Green
Cards continue to be revalidated).
RETURNS
More than 660,000 Kosovars have returned to Kosovo a month
after the deployment of NATO forces following a peace agreement.
Revised estimates for Montenegro show that 47,500 Kosovars
have returned compared to a previous count of 50,500, reflecting the fact that several
thousand have gone into Kosovo on assessment visits and returned to Montenegro. Around
33,000 displaced remain in Montenegro and an additional 21,000 mainly Serbian and Roma
people from Kosovo have arrived there in recent weeks.
UNHCR believes that around 212,000 refugees have returned
from the FYR of Macedonia to Kosovo. There are around 10,000 refugees in camps in the FYR
of Macedonia, but a re-registration of those living in host families is in progress and so
far the results show there are 21,000 of them still in the country.
Around 398,000 refugees in Albania have returned to
Kosovo. At least 44,500 are believed to be still in the country, but an effort is
currently being made to verify the numbers remaining in each Prefecture.
Of the 21,700 who had fled into Bosnia-Herzegovina, 4,400
have returned, leaving 16,600 still in the country.
ALBANIA
The number of returnees from Albania to Kosovo on Sunday
fell below the 5,000 mark for the first time since the massive repatriation started on 15
June. Sundays 4,139 departures 3,130 spontaneous and 1,009 organized
brought the overall count of returnees to 398,000.
The three-day count (July 9-11) of departures was 17,500,
including 6,600 on Friday and 6,700 on Saturday.
The drop in the number of spontaneous returns indicates
that many of the refugees remaining in Albania will need transport assistance.
Last week, the Saudi Joint Relief Committee for Kosovo
offered 20 buses to transport to Kosovo hundreds of returnees stranded at the railhead at
Mjeda outside Shkodra. The buses were put into service beginning Friday. They will shuttle
returnees daily from Mjeda to Kukes. Another 20 buses will transport refugees from Kukes
to points inside Kosovo. The Saudi group has also made available two ambulances to be
based in Prizren to move vulnerable returnees from Kukes.
Along with the looting of camps that are being emptied,
security problems persist along the roads.
At 1:30 a.m. on Saturday, bandits attacked a returnee
family travelling near Shenmari on the road between Tirana and Kukes, wounding two
persons, one critically. An AFOR helicopter later airlifted the victims to a hospital in
Durres. UNHCR has warned against travel at night on the Senmari road, where UNHCR has a
way station manned by the Salvation Army.
KOSOVO
The situation of the minorities continues to be a prime
concern.
UNHCR is looking for accommodation for around 400 Roma who
have encamped beside the Djakovica cemetery, where they remained over the weekend despite
heavy rains. They have refused to leave the area until they are transported out of Kosovo.
Conditions are appalling and children are practically sleeping in the mud.
In Orahovac, UNHCR is closely monitoring the situation of
around 3,000 Serbs from various areas in the city and the nearby villages of Velica Hoca
and Zociste who have been stranded in the town center since they fled attacks by ethnic
Albanians the past two weeks. Most of their houses have been burned and 219 of them said
they would like to leave Kosovo immediately. KFOR accompanied three of them back to their
home village of Zociste, where they saw that the Serb houses have been burned down. The
group has been joined by a number of Serb refugees from the Krajina who would like
UNHCRs help to return to Croatia.
A UNHCR team visited Velica Hoca, where tension prevails.
A Dutch KFOR contingent has been deployed there to protect around 1,000 remaining Serbs
who have been unable to move about without armed escorts.
On Friday, four more houses were burned in the Serb
quarter of Prizren, above the seminary where 130 Serbs have taken refugee. In the past
several weeks, 25 Serb houses have been burned in the downtown area. Although there are
hardly any Serbs left in Prizren, the latest incident is a clear message that Serbs are
not welcome back.
In Urosevac, a group of around 60 Kosovo Serbs were
huddled for several days on the side of the town square, next to KFOR Headquarters, before
arranging their own transport, apparently to Serbia, over the weekend.
In Djakovica, UNHCR staff report that life is slowly
returning to normal, though the law-and-order situation is still precarious. It is
estimated that 80 percent of the original town population (which was 61,000) have
returned, and that 70 percent of the population in the surrounding villages have come
back. Altogether around 110,000 people are thought now to have come back to the
municipality which had a pre-war population of around 131,000.
A team from Handicap International arrived last week in
Djakovica and has begun mine clearance operations, beginning with schools, which will be
used this summer for catch-up classes, which started last week.
FYR of MACEDONIA
In a development welcomed by UNHCR, the Skopje authorities
have agreed to extend the validity of the registration document held by Kosovar refugees
living outside of camps (the so-called "green cards") through 28 September. A
recount of this population is being done as the green card holders come to police stations
to have the validity of their cards extended. So far, 21,000 green-card holders who remain
in the FYR of Macedonia have been counted. The revalidation exercise is continuing.
As border traffic returns to normal, and Kosovars travel
increasingly back and forth along with other Yugoslav passport holders, it has become
difficult to get an accurate count of refugees returning. UNHCR is concentrating on
reporting the number of refugees who return in organized movements as well as returns of
the green card holders.
Ethnic Albanians from Serbias western towns of
Presevo and Bujanovac continue to trickle into the FYR of Macedonia, bringing stories of
harassment by Serbian police. Anywhere from a few ethnic Albanians to several hundred
arrive each day in the Macedonian municipality of Tabanovce.
The recent arrivals say their homes in Presevos
Caradak hills have been burned, their movements in Serbia have been restricted and food
purchases have been limited. UNHCR has also received reports that 400 to 500 ethnic
Albanians have been barred from returning to rebuild burned homes in nine villages in
Presevo.
RETURNS FROM THIRD COUNTRIES
Representatives from 29 countries, UNHCR and IOM are
meeting today in Geneva to discuss the co-ordination of voluntary repatriation of Kosovars
from abroad. So far at least 9,600 have returned in both organized and spontaneous
movements (from Austria, Australia, Bulgaria, Canada, Germany, Italy and Turkey).
UNHCR Turkey plans to begin on Wednesday the registration
of Kosovo refugees in Turkey for organized voluntary repatriation. Turkey has hosted
around 17,700 refugees from Kosovo, including 8,340 who came under the evacuation program
from the FYR of Macedonia. An estimated 7,600 Kosovars have returned spontaneously, mostly
from among the group who came spontaneously to Turkey at the very beginning of the
conflict. Organized voluntary repatriation flights from Turkey are expected to start at
the end of July.
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