Tuesday, April
6th, 1999 Kosovo
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KOSOVANS: AIRLIFTS TO TEMPORARY SHELTER 6 Apr. 99 The first Kosovo refugees were flown out of the
Balkans yesterday as international relief organisations began sending desperately needed
supplies to thousands awaiting sanctuary abroad, reports the Washington Post. Norway and Turkey began accepting the first of
tens of thousands of refugees expected to be granted temporary refuge in the coming weeks.
Reuters reports the German government on Sunday said European Union and NATO
countries have agreed to take in 100,000 Kosovan refugees. Germany said it would take 40,000
people, the United States pledged to
take in 20,000 and Turkey said it will take 20,000. Norway on Sunday agreed to take 6,000,
and Denmark agreed on 6,000. Sweden last month agreed to 3,500,
and will take in 2,000 this month. Romania
will take up to 6,000, said NATO yesterday. Austria also said it would take
5,000 Kosovan refugees, Canada
will take 5,000, Greece will take
5,000 and Portugal will take 1,500. Meanwhile Kyodo reports UN High Commissioner
for Refugees Sadako Ogata on Sunday called on all countries to accept some of the growing
number of refugees from the Kosovo conflict, saying they had exceeded neighbouring
countries' accommodation capacities. Ogata thanked countries that have already agreed to
offer temporary shelter to the refugees. [Planeloads of Refugees Begin to Depart Balkans
www.washingtonpost.com; U.N. calls on
all countries to accept Kosovo refugees www.kyodo.co.jp;
Sanctuary offered or proposed www.reuters.com]
KOSOVANS: 831,000 DISPLACED 6 Apr. 99 NATO
yesterday said a total of 831,000 people have been displaced from their homes in Kosovo during the last year, out of
an estimated population of 1,956,196, reports Reuters. Since NATO began air attacks
on Yugoslavia on March 24, almost
400,000 people have fled or have been expelled from Kosovo, said UNHCR yesterday. NATO
said 250,000 people are hiding inside Kosovo. UNHCR added that 226,000 have been admitted
to Albania and 35,000 to Macedonia, while another 85,000 are
waiting to enter Macedonia. It added that 150 have been flown to Turkey. Meanwhile 35,700 have been
admitted to the Yugoslav republic of Montenegro. Also 7,900 Kosovans are in Bosnia and 6,000 have been allowed
into Turkey, according to UNHCR. [Refugee numbers in Kosovo crisis; www.reuters.com]
KOSOVANS RECOUNT MASSACRES 6 Apr. 99
Evidence of massacres in south-west Kosovo
appears to be growing after the BBC obtained the first video-taped footage of bodies,
reports BBC News. Human Rights Watch and CNN have also interviewed survivors
of alleged massacres in Rejovac, near Prizren. Reuters reports Human Rights Watch,
quoting six refugee witnesses, said Yugoslav forces shot and killed 40 ethnic Albanian men
in Velika Krusa on March 26. The New York Times reports refugees pouring into
Albania from Kosovo are providing detailed firsthand accounts of mass killings and burned
corpses in villages where Serbs were forcing out ethnic Albanians. Refugees at widely
scattered places and times have given overlapping accounts to foreign journalists and
relief workers of several mass killings. Meanwhile the Washington Post reports a
senior U.S. official said spy satellites have now been tasked to help document village
atrocities and the movement of refugees in Kosovo. BBC News adds the UN
Secretary-General Kofi Annan has accused Serb security forces of "shocking violations
of human rights" in driving up to 400,000 Kosovo Albanians from their homes. [Annan
slates Serb forces + Investigations continue into massacre allegations http://news.bbc.co.uk; Rights group reports alleged
massacre in Kosovo www.reuters.com; Countless
refugee accounts give details of mass killings www.nytimes.com;
Above Inaccessible Areas, Satellites Track Refugees and Atrocities www.washingtonpost.com]
KOSOVANS: MIXED FEELINGS ABOUT BOMBS 6 Apr. 99
If the refugees come from a place that was peaceful before the airstrikes began,
they are more likely to criticize NATO's action than are those who lived in a town where
Yugoslav forces battled the Kosovo Liberation Army, the ethnic Albanian rebel force
seeking independence for the province, reports the Washington Post. And there are
those refugees who criticize NATO but then are challenged from someone in the back of the
crowd. They change their minds. It becomes suddenly clear that there is also a politically
correct answer: NATO bombing is good. Many refugees do support NATO's military campaign
against Yugoslavia, if for no
other reason than revenge has become the only balm for ruined lives. Many refugees do
support NATO's military campaign against Yugoslavia, if for no other reason than revenge
has become the only balm for ruined lives. Refugees from Malisevo, with its strong rebel
links, generally back the bombing. [NATO Air Campaign Stirs Mixed Feelings in Refugees
www.washingtonpost.com]
KOSOVANS: AID GETS MOVING 6 Apr. 99 The
World Food Programme operation to fly supplies to ethnic Albanians driven out of Kosovo gained momentum yesterday, WFP
spokeswoman Christiane Berthiaume said, reports AFP. Three C-130 planeloads of
supplies were due to leave Italy
for Albania later yesterday, while six
flights were scheduled for today and 10 more tomorrow, bound for both Albania and Macedonia, Berthiaume said. The United States has given WFP 1.2 million
daily ration packets to distribute to the Kosovo refugees, she added. A first aid flight
on Sunday delivered 22,000 ration packs, many of which were taken by Albanian and Italian
helicopters to the north of Albania where most of the refugees have been arriving. AP
reports Pope John Paul II on yesterday urged more government and volunteer aid for the
waves of refugees. AFP adds that President Bill Clinton on Saturday deplored the
tragedy befalling Kosovan refugees and asked individual Americans to donate emergency
supplies for relief efforts. The New York Times reports USAID has established a
toll-free telephone number and Internet
site to encourage charitable donations to private groups helping the refugees. The International
Herald Tribune carries website addresses for UNHCR and others groups most active in
helping Kosovan refugees. BBC News reports Britain's leading aid agencies are
joining forces to launch a national appeal to help the Kosovans. [World Food Programme air
bridge in place to aid Kosovo refugees + Clinton asks US public to donate supplies for
Albanian refugees www.afp.com; Pope urges more
volunteer help for Kosovo refugees www.ap.org; A
relief phone line www.nytimes.com; Major
Relief Groups Aiding the Refugees www.iht.com;
Charities launch Kosovo appeal http://news.bbc.co.uk]
KOSOVANS: SOLUTIONS? 6 Apr. 99 Western
diplomats are discussing plans to send a NATO "escort force" of at least 60,000
troops into Kosovo to protect
returning refugees, once air strikes have driven Yugoslav forces out of the region,
reports the Financial Times. The Financial Times adds that President Bill
Clinton said yesterday "the ethnic cleansing of Kosovo cannot stand as a permanent
event" and vowed ethnic Albanians would return. James Rubin, State Department
spokesman, said NATO would stick to its goals of getting Serb forces out of Kosovo and
returning Albanian refugees under international protection. Reuters reports
Britain's Foreign Secretary, Robin Cook, has proposed a three-stage plan: The first aim
would be to feed and house the refugees on the spot in Macedonia and Albania. While most would stay in the
region, some would be moved to other countries on an interim basis, he said. In the third
and final stage, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic would be forced to allow the ethnic
Albanians to return to their homes. Meanwhile the Los Angeles Times at Blace
reports the refugees, despite the brutality and hardships, almost without exception have
retained a fervent determination to go home, and an optimism that NATO will make it happen
for them. [Kosovo airlift swings into action + NATO may send 60,000 troops to protect
refugees www.ft.com; Blair says goal is to return
refugees to Kosovo www.reuters.com; Exiled
Kosovars Hold Out Hope of Returning to Homeland www.latimes.com]
KOSOVANS: CREDITS, AID PLEDGED 6 Apr. 99 The
World Bank yesterday said it was preparing a US$40m emergency credit to help Macedonia handle the economic fallout of
the Kosovo crisis, reports the Financial
Times. The Bank, which funds development projects, also confirmed it was considering a
request for balance of payments support to Albania.
Both governments have called for support because of the flood of refugees. Meanwhile Reuters
reports Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar said yesterday Spain had committed US$52 million in
humanitarian aid for victims of what he called "barbarous repression" in Kosovo.
Reuters also reports Chancellor Viktor Klima said yesterday Austria would provide some US$40m in
aid for Kosovo Albanian refugees in Macedonia and Albania and grant 5,000 of them
temporary asylum. [World Bank in Macedonia loan www.ft.com;
Spain pledges aid for Kosovo refugees + Austria pledges aid, asylum for Kosovo refugees
www.reuters.com]
ALBANIA: NATO TO PROTECT AID 6 Apr. 99 NATO
decided Saturday to send up to 6,000 Italian troops to Albania to protect the humanitarian
operation helping tens of thousands of ethnic Albanian refugees from Kosovo, reports AP in
Brussels. Gen. Wesley Clark, the supreme allied commander in Europe, has been directed to
set up a headquarters in Albania to supervise the humanitarian operation and to begin
planning for an urgent deployment. "NATO is working in conjunction with the United
Nations and other international agencies to take all possible measures to avert or
ameliorate these tragic conditions and to assist the governments and people in Macedonia
and Albania," Clark said. Clark said the refugee flow is all part of a plan by
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to destabilize the Balkans. [NATO decides to send
troops to Albania www.ap.org]
ALBANIA: KOSOVAN EVACUATIONS REFUSED 6 Apr. 99
The Albanian government is
refusing to allow ethnic Albanian refugees fleeing the violence in Kosovo to be evacuated to other
countries, the information minister said yesterday, reports AP. "Albania
doesn't want to be part of the ethnic cleansing mechanism, which is forcing ethnic
Albanians out of Kosovo," said Musa Ulqini. Albanian officials are wary that refugees
who will leave the area might not return to the southern Yugoslav province of Kosovo when
the conflict is over. Meanwhile the Financial Times reports Albania yesterday
confirmed it would accept 100,000 Kosovo refugees from Macedonia after intense pressure from
western governments for Tirana to help defuse the political crisis in Skopje. The
announcement coincided with western pledges to aid Albania's burden. UNHCR promised
US$1.5m a month. It is holding a donors' meeting in Geneva today. [Albania refuses
evacuation of Kosovo refugees to other countries www.ap.org;
Tirana agrees to lighten refugee strain www.ft.com]
ALBANIA: KOSOVANS' CONDITIONS IMPROVE 6 Apr. 99
The 220,000 Kosovo refugees
in Albania were yesterday beginning to
see their conditions improve as international aid agencies started to bring their
resources to bear on the disaster, reported yesterday's Financial Times. But the
operations still face challenges, with 20,000-30,000 refugees a day pouring into the north
of the country. Meanwhile UNHCR rejects criticism for delays in supplying aid. Officials
said it was impossible to know when and where the Serbs would expel the Albanian Kosovars.
The Washington Post yesterday reported the exodus of refugees from Kosovo continued
in massive numbers Sunday, as more than 30,000 crossed into Albania in a 24-hour period
including 10,000 who entered by way of a rarely used border crossing and were
discovered unexpectedly by Western monitors. Relief workers were not immediately able to
bring the refugees to safety from the isolated Qafa e Prushit frontier post, and they were
to spend the night there without shelter in "particularly desperate" conditions.
UNHCR officials said at least seven children reportedly died of dehydration Saturday. [Aid
agencies start to improve conditions www.ft.com;
Desperate Conditions Await Many in Mass Exodus www.washingtonpost.com]
MACEDONIA: GOV'T 'ENDANGERS' KOSOVANS 6 Apr. 99
With tens of thousands of ethnic Albanians fleeing Kosovo backed up in dismal conditions
at the Macedonian border, international relief officials accused Macedonia yesterday of endangering lives
by processing the refugees too slowly, reports the New York Times. UNHCR
spokeswoman Paula Ghedini told a news conference in Skopje that Macedonian authorities
were only clearing 5,000 refugees, while 65,000 were stuck on a muddy hillside at the
border, blocked by Macedonian police and army troops. "That is not enough,"
Ghedini said. People were now dying at a rate of 10 a day, she said, and "this will
increase if we do not get people out from the open." In addition to the 65,000
believed to be stranded at Blace, the main border crossing, another 30,000 people are
thought to be on the other side of the border, in Kosovo. BBC News reports UNHCR
has appealed to the Macedonian authorities to speed up the process of registering and
accepting the tens of thousands of refugees. It has offered to take over processing the
queues, saying it can move 20,000 refugees per day. Deutsche Presse-Agentur reports
Ghedini said four new processing areas for the refugees were under construction but
signals from the Macedonian government were still unclear as to whether UNHCR will be
allowed to register the refugees. [Macedonian Delays Endanger Refugees, Relief Agencies
Say www.nytimes.com; Kosovo aid frustrated by
delays http://news.bbc.co.uk; Aid workers blame
Macedonian authorities for relief delays www.dpa.com]
MACEDONIA: SOME KOSOVANS MOVED 6 Apr. 99
Several thousand of the estimated 70,000 Kosovo refugees who have been
confined for days in squalid fields at Macedonia's
border were bused yesterday to a NATO-built temporary encampment, where they found dry
ground, drinking water, hot meals and sympathy from NATO troops, reports the Washington
Post. An estimated 5,000 to 6,000 refugees were taken from a fetid pit near the
border, where tens of thousands of hungry and increasingly ill ethnic
Albanians remained. It was unclear how Macedonian police selected those who could leave:
Some of the refugees were taken to a destination the Macedonian government declined to
reveal. As of last night, a UNHCR official said the group could not account for at least
3,000 refugees, and aid officials who asked not to be identified worried that the refugees
might have been expelled into neighbouring Albania.
The Guardian reports Clare Short, Britain's International Development Secretary,
yesterday intervened to ensure hundreds of Kosovan Albanians were given shelter after
being stranded overnight on buses in Macedonia. AFP reports Medecins sans
Frontieres yesterday demanded immediate access to some 20,000 Kosovo deportees massed
behind barbed wire in an area one kilometre and 300 metres wide on the Macedonian border.
[Refugees Find Relief Just a Bus Ride Away ww.washingtonpost.com ; Tented camps
offer glimmer of hope for a chosen few. www.guardian.co.uk;
20,000 Kosovars trapped in barbed wire in atrocious conditions www.afp.com]
MONTENEGRO: KOSOVANS MAY FLEE COUP 6 Apr. 99
Tens of thousands of Kosovan
refugees currently in Montenegro
may flee into neighbouring Albania and
Bosnia amid fears of a coup and
civil war, reports the Financial Times. Rumours of an impending coup by the
Yugoslav federal army against the government of Milo Djukanovic, Montenegro's president,
continued to swirl around Podgorica yesterday. "Everyone among the internally
displaced, refugees from Bosnia and Croatia,
our staff, the local population is feeling uncertain and insecure as to what is
next," said Robert Breen, head of UNHCR's office in Podgorica. Meanwhile AP
reports Montenegro has asked the United Nations for help in getting international aid for
thousands of refugees flooding in from Kosovo. "Montenegro almost has not received
any international aid since the beginning of the NATO military action," Montenegro's
Foreign Minister Branko Perovic said in a letter to the UN humanitarian chief Sergio
Vieira de Mello. [Civil war fears unsettle Montenegro www.ft.com;
Montenegro asks U.N. for help in getting aid for Kosovo refugees www.ap.org]
ITALY: SOME KOSOVANS ARRIVE 6 Apr. 99
Italian police yesterday said they had picked up 180 Kosovans in waters off southeast Italy in what was seen as a steady
trickle of ethnic Albanians migrants from the southern Serbian province reaching Italy
since last week, reports Reuters. Police said the 180 Kosovans, most of whom had
reached the coast near the port town of Lecce in rubber dinghies, were in good health and
were taken to shelters around the coastal Salento area. Some 65 Kurds who were also picked
up by police were transferred to temporary accommodation, while 30 illegal Albanian
immigrants were due to be repatriated by the end of the day, police said. AFP
reports Italian Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema appealed Sunday to Kosovo Albanian refugees
not to disperse through Europe but to stay in Albania in order to discourage ethnic
cleansing in their homeland. [Police pick up 180 Kosovans on Italian shores www.reuters.com; Italian premier appeals to Kosovars not
to spread through Europe www.afp.com]
KOSOVANS: OPINIONS 6 Apr. 99 We are probably
heading towards the worst humanitarian disaster in Europe since the Bosnian war, says Carl
Bildt, a former Swedish Prime Minister and international peace envoy to Bosnia, in an
op-ed yesterday for the Financial Times. A million refugees during the month to
come is a real possibility. The effects will be profoundly destabilising throughout the
region. It is now a moral imperative for NATO to launch a ground campaign into Kosovo.
There is simply no other way to limit the carnage on the ground and make it possible for
the refugees to return home. In the Washington Post, former the US Secretary of
State, Warren Christopher says NATO and the United States must prevail unambiguously in
Kosovo, using whatever force is necessary. We must act to ensure that all Kosovo refugees
return to a safe, secure environment. Such an outcome is not possible unless President
Slobodan Milosevic is permanently barred from participating in Kosovo's affairs. Also in
the Washington Post, US Senator Bob Dole says immediate objectives should be to
remove all Serbian military, paramilitary and police forces from Kosovo and create a safe
environment for the Kosovan Albanian population to return and exercise their right to
self-government. With proper strategic thinking and U.S. leadership, NATO can make
Milosevic's exit its exit strategy. Professor Tom Gallagher in the Guardian says
dispersing all or even most of the 1.7 million deportees across the world is impractical.
A strong case exists for taking the largest number the short journey to south-eastern
Italy. Temporary cities could be built and administered under EU-supervision. [Time to
send in troops www.ft.com; NATO Must Prevail + NATO
Should Make Milosevic's Exit Its Exit Strategy www.washingtonpost.com; No refuge, no future
www.guardian.co.uk]
This document is intended for public information
purposes only. It is not an official UN document. |
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