To print this page, select "Print" from the File menu of your browser

salon.com > News May 12, 1999
URL: http://www.salon.com/news/feature/1999/05/12/protest

Refugees protest treatment by Macedonians

Kosovar Albanians are clashing with police as refugee camps reach their saturation point.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Rob Mank

Aurvasi Patel was caught in an unenviable position. In front of her, she faced an agitated crowd of hundreds of Kosovar Albanians, angry at the alleged mistreatment at the hands of camp police. Behind her, a phalanx of beefy Macedonian policemen, arms folded, stood shoulder-to-shoulder in defense of their headquarters.

Intermittently, the crowd shouted "NAH-TO, NAH-TO," calling for the return of the international military alliance that constructed and first ran the camp. The NATO soldiers are viewed as heroes by the refugees here -- both as their military supporters in Kosovo and as a benevolent presence as camp stewards.

New tensions between Kosovar Albanian refugees and Macedonian police are on the rise as refugee camps reach their saturation point. The stand-off at Brazda Monday showed the Kosovo conflict in microcosm, highlighting the ethnic tension in Macedonia, where ethnic Albanians comprise nearly one-quarter of the population, according to government figures. The recent flood of refugees has greatly increased that figure, while the government has continued to allow refugees to pour into their country. Finally last Wednesday, the Macedonian government sealed the border.

This has only made the situation worse at Brazda. As Brazda's camp manager, defusing the conflict fell on Patel's shoulders. She is a United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees field officer, and Monday she served as Brazda's chief arbitrator, forced to mediate between the camp's occupants and its police force.

The crowd gathered at the police headquarters had been galvanized by an incident a few minutes earlier. A man identified only as Gashi, a 44-year-old refugee, had been apprehended by camp police. According to the police, he had been pulled from under the camp's fence, caught trying to escape. Gashi claimed he was only trying to get a leather jacket. He said an officer had smashed his head while taking him into custody. The police said he had resisted arrest, but denied any abuse.

Working with an interpreter and colleagues from UNHCR and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Patel formulated a plan. She would convene a meeting of representatives from the refugee community with a delegation from the police. Through an interpreter, who spoke with the aid of a megaphone, she announced the plan to the crowd.

Patel said she hoped the hot temperature would help disperse the crowd. With the initial fervor of the demonstration dying down, she took a deep breath and looked around. "These people have been here a long time and they are venting their frustration," she said.

The nerve-fraying job of an UNHCR field officer includes a fair amount of managing ethnic tensions in this de facto city, where each day around 24,000 inhabitants eat, sleep and carry on their daily lives. In this world circumscribed by chain-link and barbed wire, the daily life is monotonous at best.

On Tuesday, Patel said the issue of the beating that sparked the demonstration had been resolved. A delegation of refugees had aired their complaints to the police commander, with Patel on hand to mediate.

But one man, an ethnic Albanian from Skopje who was handing out free newspapers to the camp's inhabitants, wasn't aware of the meeting between police and the refugee representatives. Avni Ibrahimi, a 22-year-old volunteer with a group called "Spike of Goodness," said abuse at the hands of Macedonian police is commonplace.

For the Kosovar Albanians at Brazda and the other refugee camps, the Macedonian police are hardly better than the Serbian police who forced them from their homes. One Kosovar Albanian man at the demonstration described a litany of police abuses, including police officers illuminating the walls of the plastic bathrooms with their flashlights when women were inside.

In an effort to placate the government and alleviate stresses caused by the huge number of refugees, the UNHCR began busing refugees from Macedonia to Albania. On Monday the first three bus loads of ethnic Albanians left Brazda, Stankovic and Cegrane camps for Qatrum, in Albania. Though the number was small, about 150, it was an important symbolic gesture of catering to the wishes of the Macedonian government by the UNHCR. "It was a trial run," said Ron Redmond, a UNHCR spokesman on hand at the Stankovic camp.

Redmond says he hopes more busses will follow. "These camps are overcrowded and we have pressure from the Macedonian government to move people out. And Albania has expressed a willingness to take more," he said Monday.

Redmond said no refugees were obligated to leave a camp in Macedonia for one in Albania. "It's got to be voluntary. There's no way we're going to force people," he said. That policy probably accounts for the scant number shipped out Monday. Many among the 150 who did go to Qatrum said they had relatives in Albania.

But the longer the Kosovo conflict continues, and as the ethnic Albanians refugees are confined to camps patrolled by indifferent or even antagonistic guards, in a country led by a hostile administration, the more likely it becomes that refugees will elect to take one more journey.
salon.com | May 12, 1999


Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.