Source: http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
Accessed 29 April 1999

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Kosovo Crisis Update 29 April 1999
AT A GLANCE
  • The influx into Albania which began Tuesday continued throughout Wednesday. Around 3,300 refugees crossed into Albania through the Morini border point on Wednesday.
     
  • More than 5,000 refugees arrived in the FYR of Macedonia during the day on Wednesday.
     
  • In the highest daily total to date, almost 1,600 refugees were evacuated from the FYR of Macedonia on Wednesday to seven European countries — still short of UNHCR’s immediate daily target of 2,000 departures.
     
  • The estimated total numbers of refugees in the region are 371,000 in Albania and 154,400 in the FYR of Macedonia. The government in Skopje yesterday provided updated numbers of refugees registered as staying in host families or privately. More than 62,800 displaced Kosovars remain in Montenegro.

MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS

ALBANIA

Refugees continued to enter Albania via the Morini border post on Wednesday. By evening, 3,300 refugees had arrived, coming from a variety of areas in Kosovo. They arrived on tractors and wagons, in private cars and on foot. Several men reported they had been beaten, including one man who suffered several broken ribs. In a final indignity, many of the cars had had their windows broken and side panels smashed.

Late Wednesday afternoon, hundreds of civilians arrived from the municipality of Djakovica and several of them confirmed the testimony given by new arrivals on Tuesday about the killing of an undetermined number of males in Meja, near Djakovica. The refugees said they had been forced from Meja at around noon on Wednesday and some said they had seen bodies in a ditch alongside the road as they left. Several reported that some of the bodies had been burned. None of these reports can be confirmed independently. Other refugees confirmed earlier reports that there had also been killings in the nearby village of Oriza. They said they had seen between 15 and 20 bodies in a school in the town.

Other groups of people came from Ade, near Pristina. They were ordered to leave the area early Wednesday and said it was now virtually deserted. Still other groups came from Prizren.

FYR of MACEDONIA

Around 5,200 refugees crossed into the FYR of Macedonia on Wednesday. Those who had arrived on Tuesday were squeezed into tents quickly erected at the Blace transit site. Tents normally holding 50 people were being filled with 60 to 70 refugees. In the Stenkovec camps, UNHCR and NGOs are vacating office space to make room for more refugees.

A 12-year-old refugee girl and an elderly couple were reportedly killed and an undetermined number of others seriously injured by a landmine on the Kosovo side of the border while they were trying to enter the FYR of Macedonia through a mountain pass. Refugees reported that around 60 refugees were trying to cross when the incident happened. Four injured persons were taken to the Skopje hospital. Refugees said the rest of the group was taken to a Macedonian military camp. UNHCR is seeking access to them.

After lengthy negotiations, the Minister of Urban Planning finally gave the green light on Wednesday for the transfer of 5,000 refugees to the new refugee camp site at Cegrane. UNHCR, NGOs and the German contingent of NATO are working round the clock to ready the site. As new arrivals continued throughout the night, some had to be moved to Cegrane although preparations were not completed. Government officials also indicated that two additional sites were under consideration.

A meeting of all agencies working on community services highlighted the urgent need to develop programs for teenagers in the camps. Most programs currently target youngsters under 14 years of age, but the older youth are also in need of an outlet for their energies and a chance to come to grips with their experiences. Oxfam has set up two "coffee shop" tents in Stenkovec, one for men and one for women, which have become popular social venues in a camp with little space for community gatherings.

The Ministry of Interior in Skopje has released updated figures of refugees registered as staying in host families or privately. The number living outside of camps in the FYR of Macedonia is now put at 90,160, while the number of persons in camps as of Wednesday night was more than 64,000, increasing the total refugee population in the FYR of Macedonia to over 154,000.

MONTENEGRO

Only 35 Kosovars crossed into Montenegro on 27 and 28 April, while others continue to leave for Albania. Around 500 departed via the Hani i Hotit crossing on Wednesday.

In Rozaje, the Muslim community has asked the displaced people who have been staying in the central mosque to vacate the building, so that it can return to its normal functions. The Muslim community has offered alternative accommodation in the city and surrounding villages. A Swiss Disaster Relief team has offered to clean the mosque and repair any damage.

ICRC distributed hygiene parcels to all factories in Rozaje still housing displaced people, while UNICEF has delivered a large quantity of children’s and women’s emergency supplies to the Montenegro Red Cross, including baby blankets, diapers, children’s clothing and footwear, and sanitary articles for women.

HUMANITARIAN EVACUATION PROGRAM

On Wednesday 28 April, 1,593 refugees were evacuated to the Czech Republic, Finland, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and Turkey. This is the largest daily departure figure to date, but still falls well short of UNHCR’s immediate target of 2,000 departures a day, seven days a week.

Flights to Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom are scheduled for today.
 

KOSOVO DISPLACEMENT STATISTICS

Information as at 29 April 1999, 08:00 GMT

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

Note: today's FRY of Macedonia increase includes updated government figures for refugees staying with host families or in private accommodation
 

Table 1: Daily Population Estimates (figures refer to displacement since March 1998)
 
Refugees/Displaced in: Remarks

Total

Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 
(Republic of Montenegro)
Few new arrivals 28 April
Departures to Albania 27 April: 500

62,800

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
Arrivals 28 April: 5,200
Departures 28 April: ca. 1,600 by air (see Table 2 below)
Macedonian Red Cross/Ministry of Interior recount of refugees staying privately: 90,160. Camp population: 64,240

154,400

Albania
Arrivals from Kosovo 28 April: ca. 3,300
Arrivals from Montenegro 28 April: 500

371,000

Bosnia-Herzegovina
Total comprises Kosovar refugees only
Also 20,000 arrivals from Sandzak and 10,500 Serbs and Montenegrins

15,000

TOTAL  

603,200

Table 2: Humanitarian evacuations of Kosovar refugees 
from the FYR of Macedonia from 5 April through 28 April 1999
(figures subject to daily verification)
 

Receiving Country

Arrivals

28 April

Total 

Austria --- 811
Belgium --- 676
Croatia * --- 188
Czech Republic 115 115
Finland 147 481
France 592 1,777
Germany --- 9,974
Iceland --- 23
Israel --- 106
Netherlands 157 1,011
Norway 162 1,732
Poland --- 635
Spain --- 103
Sweden 157 444
Switzerland --- 33
Turkey ** 263 5,407
United Kingdom --- 161
TOTAL *** 1,593 23,677
* Croatia: of whom 88 bilaterally 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 29/04/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
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