NUMBERS AT A GLANCE
|
Returns to
Kosovo |
July 21-22
|
Cumulative
|
Montenegro |
497 |
51,500
|
FYR of Macedonia (1) |
352 |
215,800
|
Albania |
2,272 |
424,000
|
Bosnia-Herzegovina (2) |
550 |
7,800 |
Other countries (3) |
1,095 |
21,600 |
TOTAL |
4,766 |
720,700
|
(1) FYR of Macedonia: return figures comprise Green Card and UNHCR card
holders only.
(2)
Bosnia-Herzegovina: revised figure for cumulative returns from UNHCR Sarajevo.
(3)
Other countries: revised figure for cumulative returns from UNHCR repatriation unit
in Skopje.
KOSOVO SESSION of ECOSOC
UNHCRs Special Envoy to the Kosovo region, Mr.
Dennis McNamara, who is also the Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General
for Humanitarian Affairs in Kosovo, addressed a special session of the Economic and Social
Council in Geneva this morning devoted to Kosovo and humanitarian issues.
McNamara called the rapid return of more than 700,000
refugees to Kosovo an "unequivocal vote of confidence in the future of Kosovo."
He urged a reinforced effort to deliver materials for shelter repair in the province,
where an estimated 70,000 homes have been damaged or destroyed, and drew attention to the
continuing need for food aid and for de-mining, as well as for assistance to mine victims.
Most important, he said, is to stem the cycle of violence and revenge in Kosovo.
FUNDING
The U.N. will present to donor countries its revised
consolidated appeal for humanitarian operations in southeastern Europe (Albania, Bosnia
and Herzegovina, Croatia, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (including Kosovo), and the
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia) on Tuesday 27 July.
Funding of UNHCRs Kosovo operation has continued to
improve. Following the announcement last week of a new $18 million contribution from
Japan, two additional major contributions have been announced. On 21 July the United
States announced that it was providing a further $50 million to UNHCRs Kosovo
program, of which $10 million for a special Kosovo Womens Initiative, while the
European Commission pledged a further 30 million Euro ($31 million). This brings to $265
million the total of contributions to UNHCRs Kosovo emergency operation announced to
date.
KOSOVO
Shelter rehabilitation remains the most urgent need in
Kosovo. The second phase of the UNHCR-co-ordinated "Rapid Village Assessment"
will be released early next week, and will include around 500 villages, one-quarter of the
total being assessed. UNHCR believes that up to 70,000 houses need some degree of
reconstruction or repair throughout Kosovo.
In the meantime, UNHCR has been provided with a shelter
damage assessment conducted by the U.S. National Imagery and Mapping Agency, which
estimates that at least 67,000 buildings are heavily damaged. The images were taken at the
end of June and show residential, community, commercial and industrial sites in
Kosovos 29 municipalities. The damage assessment is done by inspecting the photos of
specific areas and counting damaged or destroyed roofs. The survey looked at 271,413
buildings and identified 25% or 67,326 as damaged. The actual level of destruction may be
higher because some buildings have been destroyed by fire or shelling, but the roof
remains intact.
The level of destruction observed from the air ranged from
a high of 70% (in Srbica, where 5,370 out of 7,723 buildings were damaged) to virtually no
destruction in Gora (just two out of 3,240 buildings damaged). Other areas with a high
level of damage were Glogovac (51%), Vucitrn (49%), Klina and Istok (47%), Suva Reka
(45%), Decani (43%), Mitrovica (37%) and Pec (35%).
MINES AND UXO IN KOSOVO
The UNs Mine Action Coordination Center is now
operational in Pristina and serves as a focal point for the planning and coordination of
mine/UXO (unexploded ordnance) related activities in Kosovo. A thorough survey is
currently being conducted by the HALO Trust to assess the scope of the mine and UXO
problem. It should be completed by mid-August.
According to WHO, mines and UXO caused up to 170
casualties in the first month since the refugee return started. 58% were caused by land
mines, 40% by UXO and 2% by booby traps. Field reports indicate that mines, UXO and booby
traps remain an obstacle to the safe return of refugees to their villages, and also hamper
the deployment of UNMIK.
Ten mine action organizations are now operational in
Kosovo, concentrating on de-mining and mine awareness work. Mine victim assistance is
becoming increasingly important, as medical and rehabilitation facilities are needed to
cope with the situation. In addition, locally trained de-miners will be required to meet
the medium and long-term needs, as the number of trained de-miners who can be deployed
from other operations is limited.
Mine accidents continue. On Wednesday one civilian was
killed and two others injured by a mine blast in Stimlje. Another civilian was injured on
Thursday when a mine exploded in a minefield which had previously been marked, but from
which the markings had subsequently been removed.
ALBANIA
UNHCR, the government of Albania and NATOs Albania
force (AFOR) have moved into the second phase of their organized repatriation plan.
Kosovars requesting assistance to return home during phase two will be moved by bus from
their area of residence to Kukes and then to Kosovo. UNHCR has a bus fleet based in Durres
for these movements. AFOR will provide escort for the buses and accompanying luggage
trucks. Because of the declining numbers of repatriants, transportation by rail via Mjeda
is no longer needed and has stopped.
The rapid, massive spontaneous return movements have
abated, and the eight way-stations which provided support to more than a quarter of a
million returning refugees will gradually be closed.
The organized repatriation began on 30 June and has
transported more than 13,500 refugees back to Kosovo by train, bus and air.
Relief items from UNHCRs warehouses in Albania are
now being ferried to Pristina by air on board a Belgian C-130. The Belgian airforce has
offered UNHCR 28 flights of this large cargo plane. In addition, deliveries by the truck
convoy co-ordinated by UK DFID continue, and a convoy of 11 water-tankers travelled on 20
July from Durres to Kosovo.
FYR OF MACEDONIA
UNHCR continues to provide assistance to refugees staying
in host families in the FYR of Macedonia, through the local Red Cross. A new UNHCR office
in Kumanovo is already well-known to refugees in the surrounding villages.
In the Lojane area, it appears that most of the remaining
refugees are ethnic Albanians whose homes are in Serbia proper, not in Kosovo. Most are
undocumented and therefore cannot return home via the official Tabanovce crossing, as the
Yugoslav authorities require possession of valid passports. UNHCR staff are looking into
the issue of conditions for return to Serbia of ethnic Albanians and facilitation of
readmission of those without documentation.
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
To date, UNHCR staff estimate that nearly 8,000 of the
Kosovars who sought refuge in Bosnia and Herzegovina have returned home. At peak there
were nearly 22,000 Kosovar refugees in Bosnia and Herzegovina, of whom around half came
after the start of NATO airstrikes in March 1999. The others fled into Bosnia over a
period of around one year, following the outbreak of hostilities in Kosovo in March 1998.
Most of the Kosovars who have gone to Bosnia have been
ethnic Albanians, but there are also quite a few Roma currently estimated at around
1,000. 20% are estimated to have arrived in 1998, 50% shortly after the start of NATO
airstrikes, and the remainder after the peace settlement. The latest arrivals claim to
have fled reprisals from ethnic Albanian returnees. Most are living privately, some in
camps or collective centers.
RETURNS FROM ABROAD
To date, more than 21,600 refugees have returned to Kosovo
from outside the region. The largest single number, around 14,700, have returned from
Turkey. Italy has informed UNHCR that voluntary returns of those Kosovars who were
evacuated to Italy from the FYR of Macedonia have been completed, with the return of 3,800
persons. Other returns have been from Austria, Australia, Canada, Croatia, Germany, the
Netherlands, Norway, Slovakia, Switzerland and the USA.
EUROPE: ASYLUM APPLICATIONS OF FRY CITIZENS
The number of asylum applications from citizens of the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (mostly Kosovo Albanians) in Europe rose sharply in the
second quarter of 1999, reflecting the crisis in Kosovo. During the period April-June
there were 42,290 asylum applications filed by Yugoslavs in the 22 countries for which
figures were available, or 60% more than in the first quarter. In June alone, 18,420
applications were filed, compared with 13,438 in May. Nearly half of the June applications
were lodged in Switzerland (8,336), while 25% (4,811) were lodged in Germany.
During the first 6 months of 1999, one in three asylum
applicants in Europe was a Yugoslav citizen. There were altogether 203,160 asylum
applications (all nationalities) during this period.
Governments record asylum applicants by nationality, not
by ethnicity, so there is no way of knowing exactly what proportion of the Yugoslav
applicants are Kosovo Albanians, Serbs, Roma or others. Previously UNHCR estimated that at
least 85% of the Yugoslav applicants were Kosovo Albanians. (see Table below)
30 DAYS IN KOSOVO: A CHRONOLOGY
(from 14 July update) |
12 June: A UNHCR
staff member joins initial deployment of NATO troops. 13 June: Inter-agency convoy of 50 vehicles carrying
250 tons of aid supplies enters Kosovo. UNHCR opens office in Pristina, the first of seven
planned in the province.
14 June: Multi-agency convoy led by
UNHCR distributes aid for 20,000 people in Glogovac town; in New York, UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan presents plan for Kosovo, including the interim civil
administration, institution building, reconstruction and humanitarian affairs the
latter to be led by UNHCR.
15 June: UNHCR establishes offices
in Prizren and Pec. Large-scale spontaneous returns begin.
16 June: Senior U.N. officials meet
in Geneva on the implementation of the civil aspects of the Kosovo peace plan and focus on
the division of labor between KFOR and U.N. agencies.
19 June: High Commissioner Sadako
Ogata discusses Kosovo on the occasion of the G8 summit in Cologne, including plans for
refugee return.
21 June: UNHCR opens office in
Urosevac, begins direct supply runs from Skopje to distribution centers in Kosovo.
22 June: UNHCR opens office in
Gnjilane.
24 June: UNHCR opens office in
Kosovska Mitrovica.
28 June: UNHCR opens office in
Djakovica, seventh and last office in Kosovo, and, with IOM, begins organized repatriation
from the FYR of Macedonia.
2 July: UNHCR begins organized
repatriation from Albania.
5 July: High Commissioner Sadako
Ogata makes a two-day visit to Kosovo, her fourth since the conflict started in the spring
of 1998 and her first since UNHCR resumed operations in Kosovo.
7 July: Organized returns from
Montenegro begin.
8 July: UNHCR issues first partial
report of survey conducted with help of NGOs and KFOR troops. The agency estimates that
40,000-50,000 homes were made uninhabitable during the war.
12 July: 30 countries take part in
a meeting under UNHCR and IOM auspices and agree on coordinated voluntary return of
refugees they are hosting. |
|