AT A GLANCE
- The number of people who have fled Kosovo since the
conflict began in March, 1998 is now more than 600,000 (see table below for UNHCR
estimated figures as at 8 April 1999, 08:00 GMT)
- Macedonian authorities cleared a huge field containing tens
of thousands of refugees along its border with Kosovo. In a situation of mass confusion,
some of these refugees were transferred to new transit points a few kilometers away,
others were sent by aircraft to Turkey and yet more were crowded into fleets of buses and
reportedly driven towards Albania and Greece.
- Some of these refugees said they did not know where they
were being sent from Macedonia. Others complained they were given no choice. UNHCR
insisted any evacuation must be totally voluntary and held discussions with Macedonian
authorities on the situation.
- The main border crossing into Albania at Morini was closed
Wednesday morning by Yugoslav authorities.
- High Commissioner Sadako Ogata flew to the region for a
first-hand look after telling an international conference that all evacuations must be
voluntary, that there will be a need for longer term protection for some refugees outside
the region and that UNHCR was working hard to improve coordination of the relief effort.
- UNHCR and other agencies issued a new donor alert,
requesting more than $138 million to assist an anticipated 650,000 refugees.
THE EXODUS
The number of people fleeing the carnage in Kosovo since
widespread internal unrest started in March, 1998 totalled more than 621,000 by Wednesday.
In the biggest influx, 293,000 persons have now sought sanctuary in Albania and a further
136,000 in Macedonia (FYROM). Smaller numbers reached Montenegro (60,000),
Bosnia-Herzegovina (24,300, including some persons from Sandzak), Turkey (7,700) and
Croatia (330). Further afield, an estimated 100,000 Kosovo Albanians have lodged asylum
applications in 27 European countries in the last year.
UNHCR estimates until now reflected separately the number
of Kosovars who had fled their province since March 24, 1999, the day NATO launched its
operations in the region. The new figures show the total number of people who have left
their homes since Kosovo effectively plunged into widespread unrest a year earlier, in
March, 1998.
As an international aid effort moved into high gear, the
situation of refugees varied wildly from region to region Wednesday. In the most dramatic
development, Macedonian authorities overnight cleared out a squalid field in nomans
land along the border, sending tens of thousands of refugees in all directions. Many
transferred to new transit camps nearby, but others were bundled onto planes and buses and
were being shipped out of the region.
The main exit point for Kosovars had been the Morini
crossing into Albania and some people arriving there Tuesday reported continuing
atrocities by Serbian forces. But by Wednesday morning both the Morini and Qafe Prushit
border crossings were closed.
There were virtually no new arrivals on Tuesday at the
third major exit point from Kosovo, into neighboring Montenegro.
SCENES OF CONFUSION
For days the refugees had been pouring into the Blace
checkpoint separating Macedonia from Kosovo, but tens of thousands became trapped in a
legal and physical limbo in a huge, muddy field in no- mans land not allowed
to enter Macedonia proper.
Tuesday night, Macedonian authorities cleared the field
within a matter of hours and by morning only a few dozen people remained at medical
centers. Bus shuttles carried thousands of refugees to the newly-established Brazda
transit center where they received hot meals and were housed in tents. By morning an
estimated 30,000 people were believed to be in Brazda.
The picture was far more confusing for other refugees.
Several aircraft shuttled Kosovars to Turkey, which has agreed to accept as many as 20,000
people, but some of the evacuees said they had been forced to leave. Convoys of buses
moved other refugees toward the Albanian border. There were unofficial reports that buses
full of refugees also headed toward Greece.
UNHCR insists all evacuations must be voluntary.
At a second checkpoint at the Macedonian border, at
Jazince, there were also scenes of chaos. One crowd of 3,000 people were packed so tightly
children were trapped underneath the mob and at one point several had to be pulled from
the crowd. Just across the frontier in Kosovo itself, as many as 20,000 people had
gathered to try to cross the frontier, but the checkpoint was effectively closed.
There were disquieting reports from inside Kosovo that
authorities there were now sending some people back to their home areas and turning them
away from the Macedonian border.
In Albania, at least 23,000 Kosovars arrived through the
Morini checkpoint Tuesday, before it was closed by Yugoslav authorities Wednesday morning.
A huge 35-kilomter tailback of cars stretching to the Kosovo town of Prizren had built up
and Albanian authorities had opened a second line for vehicles to speed the entry process.
The border authorities issued an entry document to each car owner. People who were dropped
by bus away from the border and who crossed on foot did not receive any documentation.
Some pedestrians said they had to pay on the buses, effectively subsidizing their own
expulsion.
Some refugees told tales of continuing atrocities. Several
men said they were among a group of 100 males who had been used as human shields by
Serbian soldiers assaulting a Kosovo Liberation Army position at Krajlan between the towns
of Klina and Djakovica one week ago. There were other reports of ongoing executions and
separation of men from their families, but none of these reports could be independently
verified.
Serbian forces also closed the second major crossing point
into Albania at Qafe Prushit and there were no new arrivals there. Serbian forces were
digging trenches nearby and reportedly threatened to shoot aid workers approaching too
closely.
A total of 85 metric tons of aid were moved to the Kukes
area of Albania Tuesday, six Italian and French helicopters, helping in the
transportation. Food was distributed immediately. Water and sanitation remain major
problems, though Oxfam was moving equipment into the region Wednesday.
An estimated 100,000 refugees remain in the Kukes area
while many others have already left for central Albania.
The Macedonian government began moving some refugees from
the border to other countries, some of them against their will. Several flights left for
Turkey while convoys of buses reportedly moved people to the Albanian and Greek borders.
At the Blace border area there was a constant bus shuttle throughout Tuesday as refugees
were crammed into vehicles and shipped out. Some refugees complained not only that they
didnt know where they were going, but also that they were being split up from the
rest of their families.
UNHCR has issued a set of evacuation guidelines which
stress that any evacuations must be voluntary and families be kept together. UNHCR
officials have been holding urgent consultations with Macedonian officials on the
situation.
MRS. OGATAS VISIT
After hosting an international conference on the Kosovo
crisis in Geneva Tuesday, High Commissioner Sadako Ogata flew first to Rome for an
audience with Pope John Paul II and talks with Italian government officials before taking
a first-hand look at the situation in Albania and Macedonia.
In her summing up remarks at the conference, Mrs. Ogata
outlined UNHCRs position on both the eventual return of refugees to Kosovo and their
temporary evacuation to countries outside the region to delegates from more than 50
countries and other humanitarian organizations.
The majority of refugees eventually want to return to
their homes and for this reason UNHCR believes "it is better to protect and assist
refugees in the vicinity of Kosovo, in order to facilitate what we hope will be an early
return," she said.
However, UNHCR recognized that in the shorter term, it
would be necessary to offer some refugees temporary safety in countries outside the
region. In those cases, all evacuations had to be totally voluntary. "Forced
evacuations will not I repeat not be accepted by UNHCR," she said.
Europe, especially, already had experience in providing
refugees from the former Yugoslavia with temporary protection and "refugees arriving
from Kosovo should be afforded similar, harmonized protection standards as long as the
need exists," she said. "Refugees with special protection needs, including
family reunification, should be carefully identified for long term resettlement in third
countries."
On the question of coordinating the rapidly increasing
humanitarian response to the Kosovo situation the High Commissioner said "We are
working hard to improve coordination arrangements" including new mechanisms with NGO
partners. She urged potential donors, however, to consult in advance before sending either
supplies or reinforcements into the region.
A NEW APPEAL
As the scale of the crisis continued to increase a new
United Nations inter-agency donor alert was launched. For planning purposes
the appeal, which runs through June 30, estimated 650,000 refugees would probably need
help and the concerned agencies asked for a total of $138.4 million to meet their needs,
including nearly $65 million for UNHCR.
|