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Less than 50 percent of registered returnees live in Croatia: UNHCR study

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Less than 50 percent of registered returnees live in Croatia: UNHCR study

A survey commissioned by the UN refugee agency has found that less than half of the roughly 120,000 ethnic Serbs registered as returnees in Croatia actually live in the country.
16 May 2007
Croatia's President Stjepan Mesic speaks at the presentation of the UNHCR study on the sustainability of minority return in Croatia.

ZAGREB, Croatia, May 16 (UNHCR) - A survey commissioned by the UN refugee agency has found that less than half of some 120,000 ethnic Serbs registered as returnees in Croatia actually live in the country.

"We estimate that actual returnees account for about 43 percent of the total number of registered returnees," said the report's authors, Zagreb University academics Milan Mesic and Dragan Bagic, during a public presentation here Tuesday attended by Croatia's President Stjepan Mesic and other dignitaries.

The survey also found that 40% of the registered Serb returnees had settled in the areas - mainly in Serbia or Bosnia and Herzegovina - where they had sought refuge during the 1991-95 Croatian War of Independence, but visit Croatia at least once a year. Some 6 percent reside sporadically in Croatia, while about 11% of the returnees have died since coming back.

The "Sustainability of Minority Return in Croatia" survey was conducted with three objectives: to obtain a reliable figure for the number of registered returnees who actually live in Croatia; to create basic indicators of the sustainability of return to Croatia; and to use these results to help develop policies to improve living conditions for returnees.

Covering a representative selection of 1,450 registered returnees and conducted between September and December last year with the help of the Croatian Red Cross and the Serb Democratic Forum, it also found that some 43 percent of returnees are aged over 60, while 46 percent are retired. The average age of all returnees is 51, compared to the Croatian average of 39 years.

The survey also found that 31 percent of returnee Serbs were unemployed, compared to a countrywide average of 17 percent for Croatia. Only 8 percent were employed or self-employed, while 11 percent were dependent on humanitarian assistance.

Meanwhile, some 88 percent of returnees lived in the same house or apartment that they had occupied before fleeing, while 43 percent of the respondents said they were satisfied with their accommodation compared to 28 percent who were openly dissatisfied with their housing. On a positive note, the study revealed that 73 percent of the interviewed returnees believed they were better off now.

Mesic and Bagic concluded that the most effective way to ensure increased and sustainable return of the Serbs was to develop and implement programmes aimed at revitalizing the economy in areas of return and at tapping the labour and entrepreneurial resources of both the Serb returnees and the majority Croat population.

Wilfried Buchhorn, the UNHCR representative in Croatia, said he agreed with the conclusions. "While the study has confirmed that the security situation, status and property issues are no longer considered as major obstacles to return, stronger, concerted effort on the national, but also international level is required in order to create better living and employment conditions for the returnees," he said. "At the same time, adequate accommodation should be secured for all those persons who wish to return and remain in Croatia."

The country's leadership, meanwhile, pledged to work for the continued return and reintegration of Croatia's Serb community. "Facilitating the return of Serb refugees to Croatia is no charity, or a gesture of generosity to the Serbs. The creation of conditions for the return of all, including the Serbs, is in the best national interest in the full sense of the word," President Mesic said in a keynote address at the presentation of the survey findings.

"There is no alternative to the process of return, and there should not be any. There is no alternative to coexistence, tolerance and equality of all citizens of this country," he added.

By Neven Crvenkovic in Zagreb, Croatia