Source: http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/jul1999/yugo-j22.shtml
Accessed 22 July 1999
Red Cross reports economic devastation
Humanitarian disaster in Yugoslavia
By Mike Head and Michael Conachy
22 July 1999
In the wake of the US-NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, the people of Serbia are confronting
a dramatically awful humanitarian crisisfar bigger than that in
Kosovoaccording to a senior Red Cross official. People have no jobs, often no water
and electricity, and face a desperate situation in the coming winter.
Speaking after returning from a visit to the war-torn Balkans, Jim Carlton, the
secretary-general of the Australian Red Cross, said NATO's air war had devastated the
basic industry and economy of Yugoslavia, creating widespread unemployment. The suffering
added to an already serious refugee situation, with more than 500,000 people previously
driven out of other parts of the Balkans.
Carlton travelled last month to Belgrade and several cities that were targetted by
NATO, including Novi Sad and Nis. He also visited Kosovo and refugee camps in Albania.
The destruction in Novi Sad was phenomenal, he told the World Socialist
Web Site. I saw the bridges that had been blown up, the oil refinery that was
reduced to scrap and the hospitals and schools where bombs went astray.
It was eerie. The oil refinery must have been hit by at least 100 sorties. It was
just blackened and twisted metalthere was nothing left standing. After the first
weeks of the bombing, NATO shifted to economic targets. Most sources of employment have
been wiped outthat is the main problem now.
The humanitarian assistance that the Red Cross can get into Serbia is minuscule
compared to the need. Economic reconstruction is required.
After some years of economic sanctions, the economy was already in a parlous
state. Now it is kaput. Many places have no electricity and no water. Many roads are
affected. It took us three hours to drive from Belgrade to Novi Sada trip that
normally takes an hourbecause of diversions.
They face a massive rebuilding task and in the meantime they face high levels of
unemployment, which will make it difficult for people to cope.
Carlton left little doubt that the NATO bombing of refineries, factories and other
workplaces was calculated. He described the missile attacks as incredibly
accurate. He gave one examplethe defence building in Belgrade opposite the Red
Cross office. Several missiles had struck it. The exterior had been left intact but inside
was only a blackened shell.
In addition to the economic damage, Yugoslavia was attempting to cope with half a
million refugees from elsewhere in the Balkans. The worst affected victims were the Serbs
who had fled the Krajina, now part of Croatia, in 1995. Carlton visited what is called a
collective centre for them in Novi Sad.
About 60 Krajina refugees were housed under pitiful conditions in a village hall.
They were sleeping in bunk beds with no privacy. There was a little toilet block out the
back in the mud, with two loos and a shower block. The cooking facilities were hopelessly
inadequate. It reminded me of a visit to Cambodian refugees on the Thai border in 1979.
Their physical conditions and psychological state were profoundly distressing,
and their fate was impossible to imagine in the difficult economic plight of the country.
Their relief allocation from the Yugoslav government was just one deutschemark per person
a daythat is about 90 cents Australian.
Carlton and the International Red Cross are concerned that the Western media will
continue to ignore the fate of the Serbian people and refugees for political reasons. He
provided the WSWS with a copy of an article he had written for the Melbourne Age
on the situation in Serbia, a contribution that the newspaper chose not to publish.
Part of the article read as follows: On Monday I visited Novi Sad, the most
prosperous city of Serbia. It is a handsome city, with strong Hungarian influences on its
culture, and containing a sizeable Hungarian minority. Australia will have seen television
images of the destruction of the three bridges across the Danube at Novi Sad, and the
burning of its oil refinery. They will also have seen pictures of the destruction of a
school and two apartment buildings by a missile that went astray. Miraculously no one was
killed in the incident.
I saw all these sites. With the loss of the bridges, not only transport but also
water supplies were cut off for one third of the city. I saw the uncovered ferries crowded
with up to 100 people huddling together in the rain crossing the swift-flowing and broad
expanse of the Danube, and another 100 waiting in the rain on either side. I wondered what
their plight would be in the freezing Serbian winter.
It is estimated that at least a quarter of Yugoslavia's electricity supplies will
be out for the winter, in a country that relies heavily on electricity for domestic
heating. Electricity shortages and the destruction of a substantial proportion of the oil
refining capacity, together with other industrial plant, have already expanded the number
of unemployed, with little hope of early recovery.
These observations apply not only to Novi Sad, but to the whole of Serbia, and to
a great extent the smaller component of the Federal Republic, Montenegro. In the eyes of a
humanitarian organisation like the Red Cross, the victims of these appalling circumstances
are mostly ordinary people hoping to go about their lives in peace and security, and with
virtually no direct influence over the political process.
Carlton cannot be accused of being pro-Serbian, let alone left-wing. He is a former
senior official of Australia's ruling Liberal Party and served as a shadow minister before
the election of the current Howard government. His comments reflect the anxieties of the
International Red Cross, which is appealing for funds to address the emergency situation.
Red Cross workers remained in Yugoslavia throughout the NATO bombing, despite fears for
their security following the arrest of two Australian CARE workers on charges of spying.
Among the Red Cross field workers are nurses, logisticians, refugee camp managers and
water and sanitation engineers. Their presence shows that aid work continued during the
war, notwithstanding CARE's claims that the arrests had made it impossible for such work
to be maintained.
Other agencies, notably the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), have expressed
alarm about the human catastrophe in Serbia. The UNHCR estimates that some 100,000 Serbian
and Roma (Gypsy) refugees have fled Kosovo and sought safety in Serbia and Montenegro
since the end of NATO's 77-day bombing campaign. They are in urgent need of
assistance, according to an UNHCR media release. If emergency aid is not
immediately provided to these people, 40 to 50 percent of whom are children under 16 years
of age, UNHCR believes their situation could turn desperate when winter comes.
It estimates that there are 530,000 refugees previously expelled from Croatia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina, 40,000 of whom are still living in overcrowded and dilapidated
collective centres.
The UNHCR suggests that Serbian authorities are putting considerable pressure on
refugees to return to Kosovo, citing Serbian press reports that school directors have been
instructed not to enrol Kosovar pupils and that the Kosovar refugees are being denied
pensions and fuel rations.
At the same time, according to UNHCR staff, the situation facing non-Albanian
minorities remaining in Kosovo is becoming critical. Homes are being burned on
a daily basis, entire Serb and Roma communities have been forced to seek evacuation and
protection from NATO occupying troops, and up to 10,000 Serbian refugees from Prizren are
sheltering in the Strpce area.
While most Western media reports focus on the return of Albanian refugees to Kosovo and
on accounts of alleged mass graves and Serbian war crimes, little coverage is being given
to the plight of NATO's war victims in the remainder of the country. This censorship is
designed to justify NATO's two-month onslaught and to suggest that the Serbian people
simply deserve whatever treatment is meted out to them.
Yet the conclusion is inescapable: under the pretext of averting a humanitarian
disaster, the US-NATO bombardment has created one. Indeed, it has exacerbated an immense
tragedy that already existed because of the earlier conflicts triggered by the major
powers in Croatia and Bosnia. |