Source: http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 19 April 1999

 

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Kosovo Crisis Update 19 April 1999
 
 

AT A GLANCE
  • After a major influx on Friday and Saturday, new arrivals slowed to a trickle on Sunday.

  •  
  • The estimated total numbers of refugees in the region are 365,000 in Albania and 132,500 in Macedonia (FYROM). An additional 73,500 Kosovars have been displaced to Montenegro.

  •  
  • Humanitarian evacuations from Macedonia (FYROM) to France and Belgium began on Sunday.

MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS

ALBANIA

The most critical situation is in Kukes, where the town is overflowing with more than 100,000 refugees. After a huge influx on Friday and Saturday, new arrivals slowed on Sunday. The border was closed after the announcement that Yugoslavia was breaking off diplomatic relations with Albania, and then reopened on Monday morning. However, no new refugees were reported to have arrived as of mid-morning on Monday. Monday morning, UNHCR staff reported that poor weather was hampering helicopter flights ferrying relief goods from Tirana to Kukes.

Moving refugees from this sensitive border area to other parts of the country remains a top priority. Around 5,000 per day can be moved out. In the meantime, shelter and sanitation in Kukes are key concerns. UNHCR has established a Water and Sanitation Coordination Cell in Kukes in order to respond to operational needs and to maximize the limited human and material resources available in the Kukes region, as well as the Tropoje and Has districts. All refugee camps have systems providing water on a 24 hour basis. A minimum of seven litres of water per person per day is available and efforts are being made to increase this per capita amount.

All refugee sites have been supplied with latrine facilities, although the numbers remain insufficient. The NGO Tear Fund is working with a local carpenters' cooperative in Kukes to increase the construction of latrine facilities. UNHCR is providing 10 metric tonnes of lime to disinfect fields around the town of Kukes which have been used as open area toilets.

Rubbish collection is underway, with UNHCR providing hundreds of empty oil drums to be used for collection in the refugee camps as well as in the town of Kukes. The Water and Sanitation Coordination Cell has also implemented a "tents for trailers" program, whereby refugee trailers, which are being used as shelter, are being exchanged for two tents. The trailers are then converted into rubbish collection facilities, facilitating the loading of transport trucks which take the rubbish to the municipal dump in Kukes.

MACEDONIA (FYROM)

There were limited movements of refugees into Macedonia on Sunday, mirroring the situation in Albania. Only around 25 refugees arrived in Blace during the day. New arrivals reported that a packed train was turned back from the border and two busloads of refugees, reportedly from Mitrovica, were diverted away from the border as well. It seems that the Yugoslav border authorities are only allowing Kosovars holding passports to cross the border. One new arrival reported that it was her second attempt to cross. On her first attempt she had been stopped by Yugoslav border guards as she didn’t have a passport. Finally she managed to cross after paying a substantial bribe.

On Sunday UNHCR delivered relief supplies to the mountain village of Male Malina, east of the General Jankovic road, where up to 3,000 refugees arrived on the weekend. The new arrivals are staying in Male Malina and surrounding villages where many have extended family members.

Refugees who arrived at the Jazince crossing on Saturday, 17 April, were taken by bus to the Neprosteno and Bojane camps and to the Radusa Collective Center. On Sunday evening an additional 500 refugees who had arrived in the no man’s land at the Jazince crossing in the early hours of the morning were finally allowed to enter. They were mainly from the areas of Urosevac and Gnjilane and said that they had been expelled from their homes, which had been subsequently set on fire, 10 days ago.

With more new arrivals expected, there is a pressing need to provide more accommodation capacity for new arrivals. The Stankovac 1 and Stankovac 2 camps have reached their maximum capacity. Attempts to expand the camps have been frustrated by protests by local farmers. Negotiation for new sites is underway at the highest level.

The High Commissioner has dispatched her Deputy, Gerald Walzer, to Macedonia for high level discussions on the refugee problem. UNHCR is urging the Macedonian government to keep its borders open to refugees fleeing Kosovo and to allow the expansion of existing camps or the creation of new camps. For its part, UNHCR is making every effort to mobilize international assistance and to expand the Humanitarian Evacuation Program.

MONTENEGRO

There were only around 500 new arrivals during the weekend. The profile remains the same as previously: Kosovars are coming on foot, through mountain paths, entering at the municipality of Rozaje.

UNHCR met with the mayor of Rozaje to try to identify new sites to house the displaced. UNHCR staff were told that no new sites may be established, due to the Yugoslav military presence in the area. UNHCR staff have noted an increased Yugoslav military presence in the municipality, and an increased number of displaced Kosovars stopped by military for identity checks.

The authorities want the displaced to be moved out of Rozaje as soon as possible. Meanwhile, in an effort to avoid confrontation between military, local population and the displaced, the authorities of the municipality have banned the serving of alcohol in public cafes.

Efforts to assist more than 20,000 displaced in Rozaje continue. A Médecins du Monde survey of 12,000 of the displaced in Rozaje found that 41% are under 15 years of age, and 20% are under 5 years old.

Distribution of UNHCR commodities brought in from Belgrade is starting today, including baby parcels, clothing, shoes, jerrycans, blankets and cooking sets, as well as tents and mattresses.

A soup kitchen with stoves provided by UNHCR has been equipped at the Dekor II site, and the kitchen will operate as of today. At the Dekor I campsite, the kitchen shed is scheduled for completion on Tuesday. Sanitation remains a top priority: ICRC is completing latrine construction at the Dekor II campsite. Construction of showers at both sites is scheduled for this week and garbage collection is being organized.

HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM

In view of the number of new arrivals, UNHCR is stepping up the evacuation program and has activated a number of offers from European countries. On Sunday, 18 April, 688 refugees were flown out of Skopje. Belgium received 340 refugees on two flights and France took in 348 refugees on 3 flights.

Several hundred Kosovars will fly to Poland today, and France, Belgium, Austria and Turkey have scheduled evacuation flights for Tuesday, 20 April.
 

KOSOVO DISPLACEMENT STATISTICS

Information as at 19 April 1999, 08:00 GMT

Total recent displacement includes figures in Tables 1 and 2. It is emphasised that the figures in Table 1 in particular should be considered as estimates.
 

Table 1: Daily Population Estimates
 
Refugees/Displaced in: Remarks

Total

Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 
(Republic of Montenegro)
 
Arrivals 17/18 April ca. 500 

73,500

Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 
(Republic of Serbia)
 
No figures for displacement within Kosovo available. 
Yugoslav government report of 50,000 in Serbia unconfirmed

na

Former Yugoslav Republic of  Macedonia (FYROM)  
Arrivals 18 April: ca. 500 
Departures 18 April: ca. 700 by air (see Table 2 below) 

132,500

Albania  
Arrivals 18 April: ca. 6,000

365,000

Bosnia-Herzegovina  
Includes Kosovo Albanians, Serbs and Muslim Slavs from Sandzak.

32,300

TOTAL  

603,300

Table 2: Humanitarian evacuations of Kosovar refugees 
from Macedonia (FYROM) from April 5 through April 18
(figures subject to daily verification)
  

Receiving Country

Arrivals

18 April

Total 

Austria --- 161
Belgium 340 340
Croatia --- 88
France 348 348
Germany --- 9,974
Iceland --- 23
Israel --- 106
Norway --- 1,104
Poland --- 60
Switzerland --- 33
Turkey § --- 3,692
TOTAL 688 15,929
Croatia: bilateral arrangement with FYROM 14 April without UNHCR/IOM involvement
§ Turkey: of whom 1,980 without UNHCR/IOM involvement (source: Turkish government)
Total: of whom 2,068 without UNHCR/IOM involvement 

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 19/04/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
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