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Kosovo Crisis Update 06 April 1999
Source: UNHCR at http://www.unhcr.ch/news/media/kosovo.htm
 
 
Note: the text below is currently published daily, while the figures in the "Displacement Statistics" table are updated as they are confirmed.
 
6 April 1999

 

AT A GLANCE
  • Tens of thousands of new refugees, some recounting stories of summary executions and torture, arrive in Albania as the humanitarian crisis continues to deepen.

  •  
  • At least 262,000 Kosovars have now arrived in that neighboring state and the total number of refugees leaving since March 24 totals more than 430,000. In addition to those in Albania, they include 120,000 in Macedonia (FYROM), 36,700 in Montenegro, 7,900 in Bosnia and Herzegovina and 6,000 in Turkey. (see table below for UNHCR figures as at 6 April 1999, 07:00 GMT)

  •  
  • High Commissioner Sadako Ogata tells an international emergency meeting that the enforced evacuation from Kosovo is an attempt to "destroy its collective identity."

  •  
  • UNHCR issues guidelines on the evacuation of refugees to temporary safety, emphasizing family unity, family reunification and that all movements must be voluntary.

THE EXODUS

As the humanitarian crisis in Kosovo continued to deepen, tens of thousands of refugees flooded into Albania Monday and Tuesday, many reporting atrocity stories of summary execution and torture.

UNHCR field staff said at least 25,000 Kosovars arrived at the main Albanian border point at Morina between Monday and Tuesday mornings and a further 15,000 at the mountain frontier of Qafe Prushit, bringing the estimated total to 262,000.

Virtually every Kosovar arriving at Qafe Prushit came on foot "in very, very bad physical condition" according to field workers, some with reports of widespread atrocities. Though these reports could not be independently verified, refugees interviewed told similar tales of para-military groups linked to Arkan unleashing a wave of terror in the Djakovica area of Kosovo.

The reports said men were being both tortured and even executed in front of their families. There were, in fact, few men crossing the border Monday with the women, children and elderly.

The situation at the crossing itself was extremely tense. Serbian police stationed just opposite the Albanian border post warned journalists they would shoot if the correspondents approached. The police told aid officials to withdraw 500 meters from the crossing.

Morina was again deluged with waves of refugees. Many people came by car and there was a huge wagon train of vehicles waiting to cross. Others traveled by bus and were dropped off several kilometers from the border and walked to the crossing. The arrivals came from several parts of Kosovo, including Pristina, Mitrovica and Glogovac.

Increased supplies of food were reaching the refugees in Albania. A total of 60 metric tonnes of food was lifted by helicopter and trucks to the main refugee staging point at Kukes.

Four cases of measles were reported among the refugees, and vaccines are being shipped into the area immediately by UNICEF and WHO.

In Macedonia an estimated 14,000 people had been moved from the chaotic border area into transit centers. About half were accommodated at Brazda and another 7,000 at four tented sites at Radusa, Neprosteno, Bojane and Stankovic, all of which can accommodate additional refugees.

Throughout Monday UNHCR officials and a food convoy were harassed by government officials at Bojane, before NATO officials intervened. There were also continuing difficulties with registration procedures. UNHCR has yet to receive a single registration list or advance notification of when, where and how refugees are being moved from the border area.

That region remained chaotic, with at least 65,000 people milling around in muddy, open fields in no-man's land, while the nearby centers remained partially empty.

In Montenegro, an estimated 1,000 refugees arrived Monday in Rozaje from the Kosovo region of Istok after walking for 13 hours. A bridge on the main road from Montenegro to Mitrovica was blown up by NATO airstrikes during the weekend, possibly halting an earlier movement of refugees from that region.

The Istok refugees said military operations began in that region a week earlier and many people had been hiding in nearby woods since then. Shelling began again during the weekend.

Earlier arrivals in Montenegro are now being moved to camping sites on the coast where they are being housed in tents.

EMERGENCY MEETING

High Commissioner Sadako Ogata said Tuesday the forced exodus from Kosovo was a deliberate attempt to "destroy its collective identity." She told an emergency international meeting in Geneva that the expulsion of huge numbers of Kosovars was "forced, planned and directed" which made the crisis "all the more unmanageable and destabilizing."

Mrs. Ogata delivered her remarks to the opening session of the Humanitarian Issues Working Group (HIWG) which was convened to review the crisis and its implications for countries inside and outside the region. Fifty-six nations including Albania, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Macedonia (FYROM) attended the one-day session as well as the heads of humanitarian agencies and non-governmental organizations.

The High Commissioner repeated a call she made earlier in the emergency, urging countries beyond Kosovo’s immediate neighbors to take in refugees on a temporary and exceptional basis to help ease the immediate crisis.

Long-term, she said, "Solutions for the overwhelming majority means returning to their homes as soon as possible" backed by a strong international commitment to the stability of Kosovo.

GUIDELINES

UNHCR issued a set of guidelines and criteria covering temporary refuge as the first officially evacuated refugees left the region. UNHCR said all evacuations had to be on a voluntary basis only, with every effort made to respect family unity and, wherever possible, family reunification in cases where members have been separated during their initial flight. Priority should be given to particularly vulnerable people or those with special needs, though everyone should be medically fit to sustain travel.

Thus far a total of 70,000 places have been made available to Kosovars from countries including Germany, the United States, Turkey, Canada and Norway.

Ninety people left Monday for Norway. Another 1,360 went to Turkey, but UNHCR expressed concern that the majority of these people had not been properly registered before they left and that any transfers should be completely voluntary. A special UNHCR team was en route to Skopje to handle future refugee registration.
 

DISPLACEMENT STATISTICS
Information as at 6 April 1999, 07:00 GMT
 
REFUGEES AND DISPLACED IN: Remaining from earlier conflicts in Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina 1991-1995
(figures as of 1 March 1999)
Resulting from Kosovo conflict
(from 1 March 1998 through 24 March 1999)
Resulting from Kosovo conflict
(since 24 March 1999)
Kosovo

260,000 internally displaced (no data available)
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 223,000 refugees from Bosnia, 300,000 from Croatia 55,000 displaced from Kosovo (of whom, 25,000 in Montenegro) 36,700 Kosovars in Montenegro
FYR Macedonia 1,250 refugees from Bosnia 16,000 refugees from Kosovo 120,000 refugees from Kosovo
Albania

18,500 refugees from Kosovo 262,000 refugees from Kosovo
Bosnia & Herzegovina 836,500 internally displaced, 30,000 refugees from Croatia 10,000 refugees from Kosovo 7,900 refugees from Sandzak, FRY (Muslim Slavs), as well as Kosovo Albanians and Serbs
Europe 128,000 people from Bosnia & from Croatia still without extended residence status 100,000 refugees from Kosovo (no data available)
Croatia 30,000 refugees from Bosnia; 62,000 internally displaced 330 refugees from Kosovo

Slovenia 3,500 from Bosnia

(no data available)
Turkey (no data available)

6,000 refugees from Kosovo

 

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 07/04/99
Stuart.Stein@uwe.ac.uk
©S D Stein
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