Stenkovec camp explained

Official Name:Stenkovec camps
Population Total:62,000
Population As Of:May 1999
Population Blank1 Title:Stenkovec I
Population Blank1:30,000
Population Blank2 Title:Stenkovec II
Population Blank2:32,000
Governing Body:NATO
Established Title:Camps established
Established Date:2 April, 1999

The Stenkovec camps were a series of refugee camps established by NATO and UNHCR in April 1999 near Skopje, Republic of Macedonia, meant to accommodate the recent influx of Kosovar Albanian refugees fleeing oppression and ethnic cleansing in Kosovo.[1] [2] The camps became infamous for their poor conditions, for instance the reported police brutality and discrimination against the Albanian refugees by the Macedonian authorities.[3]

The majority of the Albanian refugees left the camps between June and July 1999, after which Stenkovec I was closed. Meanwhile, a new wave of non-Albanian refugees (Serbs and Roma) entered the second camp in September 1999. Finally, Stenkovec II was closed in late 1999, which marked the end of the Stenkovec camps.[4]

Notes and References

  1. News: Reopened Macedonian border draws few refugees . 17 May 2023 . CNN.
  2. Web site: FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA: The protection of Kosovo Albanian refugees .
  3. Web site: Refugees Demand NATO Take Over Camp. AP NEWS.
  4. https://neuron.mefst.hr/docs/CMJ/issues/2002/43/2/11885045.pdf