The kosovo tragedy: looking into the face of human suffering.

PositionUN-Secretary General Kofi Annan visits - Brief Article

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan on 19 and 20 May visited refugee camps in Albania and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, where he, in his own words, spent "two heart-rending days" with the victims of Kosovo, who by the end of May numbered nearly 800,000.

He went, he said, "to see for myself their suffering, to express the solidarity of the United Nations with the victims of the brutality and 'ethnic cleansing' and to tell them that the United Nations not only is helping them in their present plight but is preparing in every way for their return in safe and secure conditions."

Accompanied by his wife, Nane, and senior UN officials, Mr. Annan went from camp to camp, speaking with refugee families and aid workers, witnessing for himself the tragedy as it unfolds. He came away with a sense of "profound outrage", he said, "at what has been deliberately inflicted upon the people of Kosovo." It renewed his conviction that "we must find a solution as soon as possible - a solution that secures the safe and speedy return of this people to their homes with their political and human rights respected."

On returning to New York, Mr. Annan wrote the following first-person account of his visit, which was distributed through the Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and also appeared in the International Herald Tribune, among other publications.

At the Blace border crossing with Kosovo, I held the hand of a 100-year-old woman who asked me with tears in her eyes, "How could this be happening to me at this time in my life?"

I spoke to a young mother who only three weeks before had given birth to a child while hiding in the mountains.

A woman holding a 3-year-old boy told me that her last memory of her husband was when he was attested and taken away. She has not heard from him since.

In the Stenkovac camp in Macedonia, I listened to an old man whose entire village had been in flight for two months, seeking refuge wherever possible and finding it only now.

In Albania, in the Kukes camp, I visited a young woman in a field hospital who had been shot in the leg as she fled her home with her newborn baby.

On the border between Albania and Kosovo, I visited a small family in a tent who, with extraordinary dignity and quiet courage, welcomed me and asked only that they be allowed to return to their homeland. I could only tell them that it is what we want, too. Indeed, that is what the world demands.

And as I was leaving the camp I was deeply moved by a small...

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