of old gentlemen who just came across said that the train is no longer on the other side," Ron Redmond told reporters. "They were told by some gypsies over there that the train has gone back north with everybody on it. That is all we know, but also we can hear a few explosions over the other side which also gives us some cause for concern." It was not immediately clear whether the explosions heard on the Yugoslavian side had any connection with the train. Earlier Redmond said the train had arrived in the morning, similar to the pattern of the two previous days when some 900 ethnic Albanians crossed over. "We had assumed there will be more people getting off this train than we saw yesterday or the day before," Redmond said. "Some of the first people to come say that the Serbs are not allowing most of the refugees to get off this train. "They say there are four or five carriages absolutely packed, so we could be saying well over 1,000, maybe 1,500, possibly 2,000 refugees on this train," he said.