News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International
News Service 124/99
AI INDEX: EUR 65/04/99
29 JUNE 1999
Return to Kosovo: not a solution for all
"No one knows that I am here. I am too old to go anywhere else, it was very difficult for me to travel here and to come
to the border. I just want God to take me." (A 92-year-old refugee in a camp in Macedonia)
Even as the official UNHCR programme to return refugees to parts of Kosovo deemed safe begins, many who are unable to go
are in urgent need of an alternative, Amnesty International said in a new field report launched today.
As thousands of refugees pour back into Kosovo, some through organized returns, some spontaneously, Amnesty
International called for particular attention to be paid to the needs of refugees who are too vulnerable to go back.
"Provision should be made to protect the elderly, women and children alone, the disabled and people requiring medical
attention, including victims of torture," the organization said.
"All refugees should be provided with more information to allow them to make an informed choice about return and the
rights to which they are entitled."
Following the announcement that the Humanitarian Evacuation Programme has ended, Amnesty International is stressing that
there is still a need for a similar programme to provide for the protection needs of vulnerable refugees. Those refugees
who cannot yet return should continue to benefit from asylum in Macedonia, or be resettled in other countries or be
integrated in host countries.
In its new field report, Amnesty international highlights the difficulties faced by refugees in recent weeks due to lack
of proper information that would allow them to make an informed decision about return.
The report also includes the following recommendations to ensure that the international community continues to protect
refugees still unable to return: The international should continue to provide protection to those refugees unable to
return to Kosovo in the immediate future.
Refugees should be provided with individual refugee identity documents, which would be valid documentation for
benefiting from further protection programmes.Refugees should be provided with adequate information about available
protection programmes.
ENDS
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