Europe South Asia Asia Pacific Americas Middle East Africa BBC Homepage World Service Education



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point

In Depth

On Air

Archive
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Sunday, May 9, 1999 Published at 17:33 GMT 18:33 UK


UK

Refugees escape 'absolute hell'

The refugees clapped when the plane touched down

Two planeloads of refugees from the Kosovo crisis will wake up on Monday to their first day in Scotland.

Kosovo: Special Report
The first flight arrived from Macedonia on Sunday afternoon and the second touched down at Prestwick airport later in the evening.

Scottish Refugee Council worker Sheena MacDonald said they had been through "absolute hell".

Ms Macdonald, who travelled with the refugees, said they had been in tears as they said farewell to their families before boarding buses to take them to the plane.

But they had been relieved to escape the squalor and deprivation of the camp, and had clapped when the plane touched down at Prestwick.


The BBC's Liz MacKean: "It doesn't seem right to call these people lucky"
"In particular there was one family who were making a decision to leave behind some of their extended family to come to Scotland today, and it was very distressing," she said.

'Goodbye for the last time'

"When the buses left, people were throwing their coats off to relatives and friends they were leaving behind and lifting up small children so people could touch them and say goodbye for what some thought would be the last time.


[ image: Refugees of all ages have suffered terribly in the camps]
Refugees of all ages have suffered terribly in the camps
"The people are very, very tired and exhausted but also very, very happy to be getting out of the camps.

"Anybody who has come on the flight today has lost somebody."

More staff and aid are desperately needed for the camps in Macedonia, where people have no possessions, and some are sleeping on bare earth inside the tents and having to wash in a river.

'Meagre rations'

"These people are human beings who have been through absolute hell. Some people haven't eaten properly for over a month because food rations are very sparse," said Ms MacDonald.

"We spoke to one woman who was literally having ro rip up T-shirts to make a nappy for a child who was born in the camp," she said.

Brits in Balkans
Refugees were glad to be out of the camps, but they saw their time in Scotland as a short term situation, Ms MacDonald said.

Among the refugees who arrived on Sunday were a 10-week-old baby and a 99-year-old woman.

Medical teams tended to them during the three-and-a-half hour flight, but none needed to go to hospital after the plane landed.

About nine of them were reported to be expecting to be reunited with members of their families in the UK.

High-rise flats in the Springburn area of Glasgow, which were formerly inhabited by students, have been made available to accommodate them. Others will be put up in nearby Renfrew.

One of the refugees on the flight, Teuta Dumani, 21, from Pristina, described how she was given just five minutes to leave her home.

'Marked with a cross'

Miss Dumani, who had been studying English at a private language school before she was forced to flee, said: "We had to leave because the Serb people arrived at our homes and told us we had to leave.

"They said that we had wanted Nato to come so they wanted us to leave, they put us on a train and we were very afraid.

"They put the mark of a cross on our backs to mark the Albanians from the Serbs. The Serbians walked in the streets with guns and it was very bad, I don't know how to describe how terrible it was.


[ image: Refugees reaching out for food in one of the camps]
Refugees reaching out for food in one of the camps
"When we travelled in the car they stopped and robbed us of all our money and they said if we had any more we would be killed.

"They said 'don't come back to your home because we will kill you'."

Miss Dumani said she and her family were taken to the border town of Blace where they stayed for three days without food or water before being moved on to Stenkovec, near Skopje.

"There were small children dying every day in Blace but it was much better in Stenkovec," she said.

"We stayed there five weeks and the Nato soldiers were very good to us.





Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©


UK Contents

Northern Ireland
Scotland
Wales
England

Relevant Stories

09 May 99 | UK
Scots offer sanctuary to refugees

06 May 99 | Kosovo
How warm is the UK welcome?

09 May 99 | Europe
Nato strikes continue

04 May 99 | UK Politics
UK to take 'thousand refugees a week'

26 Apr 99 | UK
UK Kosovo refugees 'glad to be safe'





Internet Links


UNHCR Kosovo News

Serbian Ministry of the Interior

Glasgow City Council

Kosovo Crisis Centre


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

Next steps for peace

Blairs' surprise over baby

Bowled over by Lord's

Beef row 'compromise' under fire

Hamilton 'would sell mother'

Industry misses new trains target

From Sport
Quins fightback shocks Cardiff

From Business
Vodafone takeover battle heats up

IRA ceasefire challenge rejected

Thousands celebrate Asian culture

From Sport
Christie could get two-year ban

From Entertainment
Colleagues remember Compo

Mother pleads for baby's return

Toys withdrawn in E.coli health scare

From Health
Nurses role set to expand

Israeli PM's plane in accident

More lottery cash for grassroots

Pro-lifers plan shock launch

Double killer gets life

From Health
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer

From UK Politics
Straw on trial over jury reform

Tatchell calls for rights probe into Mugabe

Ex-spy stays out in the cold

From UK Politics
Blair warns Livingstone

From Health
Smear equipment `misses cancers'

From Entertainment
Boyzone star gets in Christmas spirit

Fake bubbly warning

Murder jury hears dead girl's diary

From UK Politics
Germ warfare fiasco revealed

Blair babe triggers tabloid frenzy

Tourists shot by mistake

A new look for News Online