Posted on 04/20/2003 6:33:09 AM PDT by Karadjordje
Place: Velika Kladuska, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 2,266 | 35 |
Bosnian Muslims | 48,408 | 50,544 |
Bosnian Croats | 740 | 190 |
other ethnic groups | - | - |
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Total | 52,908 | 50,769 |
(1) Census 1991, according to UNHCR Population Figures from Febraury 14, 1997. (2) According to UNHCR Population Figures from Febraury 14, 1997. |
Place: Domaljevac Samac, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1999 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 13,628 | 278 |
Bosnian Muslims | 2,223 | 140 |
Bosnian Croats | 14,731 | 6,540 |
other ethnic groups | 2,368 | 60 |
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Total | 32,950 | 7,018 |
(1) Census 1991, according to UNHCR Population Figures from February 14, 1997. (2) According to UNHCR Population Figures from Febraury 14, 1997. |
Place: Odzak, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 6,084 | 3 |
Bosnian Muslims | 6,229 | 5,220 |
Bosnian Croats | 16,229 | 11,121 |
other ethnic groups | 1,740 | - |
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Total | 30,282 | 16,344 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of ODZAK, July 1998; Republik Österreich - BKA IV/12, Koordinationsbüro Sarajevo, Stand 1996. |
Place: Orasje, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1999 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 4,235 | 150 |
Bosnian Muslims | 1,893 | 2,245 |
Bosnian Croats | 21,308 | 22,619 |
other ethnic groups | 931 | - |
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Total | 28,367 | 25,014 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of ORASJE, February 1999. |
Place: Banovici, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 4,520 | 409 |
Bosnian Muslims | 19,144 | 29,391 |
Bosnian Croats | 531 | 566 |
other ethnic groups | 2,393 | 212 |
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Total | 26,588 | 30,578 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of BANOVICI, November 1997. |
Place: Kalesija, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1999 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 7,669 | 10 |
Bosnian Muslims | 33,226 | 35,342 |
Bosnian Croats | 33 | 2 |
other ethnic groups | 867 | - |
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Total | 41,795 | 35,354 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of KALESIJA, Juli 1999. |
Place: Kladanj, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 3,846 | 179 |
Bosnian Muslims | 11,702 | 22,722 |
Bosnian Croats | 12 | - |
other ethnic groups | 480 | - |
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Total | 16,040 | 22,934 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government; ECMM, Background Report KLADANJ 1997. |
Place: Lukavac, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 12,281 | 296 |
Bosnian Muslims | 37,866 | 47,601 |
Bosnian Croats | 2,132 | 1,504 |
other ethnic groups | 3,531 | 234 |
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Total | 56,830 | 49,635 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) UNHCR / RIC, Municipality Information Fact Sheet LUKAVAC, July 1998. |
Place: Srebrenik, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 5,326 | 348 |
Bosnian Muslims | 30,595 | 44,734 |
Bosnian Croats | 2,761 | 2,508 |
other ethnic groups | 2,200 | 348 |
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Total | 40,882 | 47,938 |
(1) RIC, MIFS 1998. (2) TUZLA-PODRINJE KANTON, Ministerium für Arbeit, Soziales und Flüchtlinge, März 1998. |
Place: Zivinice, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 3,350 | 606 |
Bosnian Muslims | 44,580 | 65,202 |
Bosnian Croats | 3,870 | 3,395 |
other ethnic groups | 2,800 | 348 |
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Total | 54,600 | 69,551 |
(1) Census 1991 (2) SFOR, Population Data, October 1997 und DRC, Repatriation Project Information on the Municipality of ZIVINICE, June 1997. |
Place: Breza, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 2,122 | 243 |
Bosnian Muslims | 13,079 | 13,646 |
Bosnian Croats | 851 | 521 |
other ethnic groups | 1,265 | 163 |
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Total | 17,317 | 14,573 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) UNHCR SARAJEVO: Assessment Report Federation BREZA, June 1998. |
Place: Kakanj, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 4,915 | 500 |
Bosnian Muslims | 30,450 | 35,000 |
Bosnian Croats | 16,645 | 4,500 |
other ethnic groups | 3,850 | 250 |
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Total | 55,850 | 45,868 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) OHR, 01,06,1998; Return Plan; Zenicko-Dobojski Kanton, January 1998. |
Place: Maglaj, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 13,298 | 164 |
Bosnian Muslims | 19,637 | 21,238 |
Bosnian Croats | 8,366 | 6,500 |
other ethnic groups | 1,993 | - |
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Total | 43,294 | 28,000 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of MAGLAJ, July 1998; Republik Österreich - BKA IV/12, Koordinationsbüro Sarajevo, Stand 1996. |
Place: Olovo, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 3,193 | 45 |
Bosnian Muslims | 12,699 | 14,555 |
Bosnian Croats | 642 | 550 |
other ethnic groups | 422 | 164 |
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Total | 16,956 | 15,150 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) UNHCR/RIC, Repatriation Information Report, March 1997. |
Place: Vares, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 3,630 | 56 |
Bosnian Muslims | 6,721 | 9,700 |
Bosnian Croats | 8,982 | 3,500 |
other ethnic groups | 2,781 | 37 |
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Total | 22,114 | 13,293 |
(1) Census 1991 (2) Figures provided by the local government, September 1997. |
Place: Visoko, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 7,471 | 700 |
Bosnian Muslims | 34,373 | 44,277 |
Bosnian Croats | 1,872 | 500 |
other ethnic groups | 2,444 | 2,000 |
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Total | 46,160 | 47,477 |
(1) Census 1991 (2) UNHCR Updated Assessment Report, June 1998. |
Place: Zavidovici, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 11,640 | 618 |
Bosnian Muslims | 34,198 | 35,073 |
Bosnian Croats | 7,576 | 1,013 |
other ethnic groups | 3,750 | 200 |
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Total | 57,164 | 36,904 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of ZAVIDOVICI, November 1997. |
Place: Zenica, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 22,552 | 3,528 |
Bosnian Muslims | 80,281 | 104,575 |
Bosnian Croats | 22,626 | 10,405 |
other ethnic groups | 19,900 | 1,528 |
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Total | 145,359 | 120,036 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of ZENICA, September 1997. |
Place: Foca (FBuH), Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 1,315 | 7 |
Bosnian Muslims | 4,270 | 2,479 |
Bosnian Croats | - | - |
other ethnic groups | - | - |
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Total | 5,585 | 2,486 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government, December 1998. |
Place: Praca, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 1,062 | - |
Bosnian Muslims | 2,160 | 1,284 |
Bosnian Croats | 2 | - |
other ethnic groups | - | - |
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Total | 3,224 | 1,284 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of PRACA, October 1998. |
Place: Bugojno, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 8,854 | 400 |
Bosnian Muslims | 19,724 | 28,474 |
Bosnian Croats | 15,963 | 2,200 |
other ethnic groups | 2,302 | - |
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Total | 46,843 | 31,074 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of BUGOJNO, November 1997. |
Place: Donji Vakuf, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1999 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 9,533 | 47 |
Bosnian Muslims | 13,509 | 12,740 |
Bosnian Croats | 682 | 66 |
other ethnic groups | 820 | 66 |
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Total | 24,544 | 12,853 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of DONJI VAKUF, March 1999. |
Place: Novi Travnik, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 4,097 | 879 |
Bosnian Muslims | 11,649 | 12,469 |
Bosnian Croats | 12,127 | 16,907 |
other ethnic groups | 2,829 | 29 |
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Total | 30,702 | 30,284 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) ECMM, Background Report NOVI TRAVNIK, 1997. |
Place: Travnik, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 7,777 | 539 |
Bosnian Muslims | 31,813 | 48,861 |
Bosnian Croats | 26,118 | 9,144 |
other ethnic groups | 5,039 | 823 |
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Total | 70,747 | 59,367 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local Croatian-Muslim government of NOVA BILA. |
Place: Caplina, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 3,793 | 596 |
Bosnian Muslims | 7,553 | 596 |
Bosnian Croats | 15,001 | 28,108 |
other ethnic groups | ||
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Total | 27,882 | 29,300 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) UNHCR MOSTAR, CAPLJINA update, October 1997. |
Place: Kalesija, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1999 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 7,669 | 10 |
Bosnian Muslims | 33,226 | 35,342 |
Bosnian Croats | 33 | 2 |
other ethnic groups | 867 | - |
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Total | 41,795 | 35,354 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of KALESIJA, July 1999. |
Place: Mostar, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 9,500 | 1,992 |
Bosnian Muslims | 10,266 | 7,203 |
Bosnian Croats | 33,500 | 47,255 |
other ethnic groups | 8,175 | 793 |
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Total | 61,441 | 57,243 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) UNHCR, August 31, 1997. |
Place: Mostar Sjever, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1999 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 5,041 | 20 |
Bosnian Muslims | 6,358 | 10,897 |
Bosnian Croats | 2,248 | 26 |
other ethnic groups | 460 | 2 |
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Total | 14,107 | 10,945 |
(1) Repatriation Information Center, Municipality Information Fact Sheet (MIFS): MOSTAR-NORTH, Stand Oktober 1998. (2) Figures provided by the local government, May 1999. |
Place: Ravno, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1999 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 621 | - |
Bosnian Muslims | 32 | 8 |
Bosnian Croats | 2,274 | 1,256 |
other ethnic groups | 30 | - |
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Total | 2,957 | 1,264 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government, Juni 1999. |
Place: Stolac, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 3,900 | 120 |
Bosnian Muslims | 7,500 | 900 |
Bosnian Croats | 6,400 | 11,000 |
other ethnic groups | 500 | 30 |
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Total | 18,300 | 12,050 |
(1) Figures provided by the local government of STOLAC. (2) Figures provided by the local government of STOLAC, July 1998; IMG. |
Place: Centar Sarajevo, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 16,622 | 6,325 |
Bosnian Muslims | 39,685 | 57,933 |
Bosnian Croats | 5,411 | 4,922 |
other ethnic groups | 17,287 | 2,044 |
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Total | 79,005 | 71,224 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of SARAJEVO, April 1997. |
Place: Hadzici, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 6,391 | 650 |
Bosnian Muslims | 15,399 | 18,530 |
Bosnian Croats | 743 | 450 |
other ethnic groups | 1,662 | 370 |
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Total | 24,195 | 20,000 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the mayor of HADZICI, July 1997. |
Place: Ilidza, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 25,061 | 3,394 |
Bosnian Muslims | 28,973 | 33,458 |
Bosnian Croats | 6,914 | 2,856 |
other ethnic groups | 6,490 | - |
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Total | 67,438 | 39,708 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government, July 1997. |
Place: Ilijas, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 11,325 | 425 |
Bosnian Muslims | 10,585 | 12,372 |
Bosnian Croats | 1,736 | 480 |
other ethnic groups | 1,538 | 120 |
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Total | 25,184 | 13,397 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of ILIJAS, April 1998. |
Place: Novi Grad, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 37,736 | 3,220 |
Bosnian Muslims | 69,294 | 80,334 |
Bosnian Croats | 8,883 | 3,898 |
other ethnic groups | 20,380 | 3,447 |
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Total | 136,293 | 90,899 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of Novi Grad, 1997. |
Place: Stari Grad, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 5,178 | 1,412 |
Bosnian Muslims | 39,498 | 37,524 |
Bosnian Croats | 1,315 | 3,262 |
other ethnic groups | 4,753 | 764 |
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Total | 50,744 | 42,962 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of SARAJEVO, April 1997. |
Place: Vogosca, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 8,843 | 467 |
Bosnian Muslims | 12,549 | 15,929 |
Bosnian Croats | 1,074 | 293 |
other ethnic groups | 2,241 | 70 |
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Total | 24,707 | 16,759 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government, August 1997. |
Place: Bosansko Grahovo, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 7888 | 150 |
Bosnian Muslims | 12 | 0 |
Bosnian Croats | 226 | 220 |
other ethnic groups | 185 | 0 |
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Total | 8311 | 370 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government, 1998. |
Place: Drvar (FBuH) & Drvar (RS), Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 16,613 | 2,100 |
Bosnian Muslims | 33 | 10 |
Bosnian Croats | 34 | 8,000 |
other ethnic groups | 399 | 43 |
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Total | 17,079 | 10,100 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by Special Representative (OHR) on DRVAR and by the UNHCR, Januar 1999. |
Place: Glamoc, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 9,951 | 75 |
Bosnian Muslims | 2,257 | 680 |
Bosnian Croats | 184 | 3,501 |
other ethnic groups | 201 | - |
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Total | 12,593 | 4,256 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of GLAMOC, Oktober 1998. |
Place: Kupres, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1996 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 4,905 | 0 |
Bosnian Muslims | 769 | 250 |
Bosnian Croats | 3,848 | 2,150 |
other ethnic groups | 96 | 4 |
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Total | 9,618 | 2,500 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) OHR, 1996. |
Place: Livno, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 3,782 | 200 |
Bosnian Muslims | 5,927 | 3,200 |
Bosnian Croats | 28,456 | 28,456 |
other ethnic groups | 1,361 | 0 |
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Total | 39,526 | 39,400 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of LIVNO, Oktober 1998. |
Place: Tomislavgrad, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1997 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 576 | 0 |
Bosnian Muslims | 3,148 | 2,500 |
Bosnian Croats | 25,976 | 24,165 |
other ethnic groups | 309 | 833 |
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Total | 30,009 | 27,498 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government of TOMISLAVGRAD, Dezember 1997. |
Place: Bosanska Krupa, Bosnia |
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Ethnicity | 1991 (1) | 1998 (2) |
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Bosnian Serbs | 13,129 | 75 |
Bosnian Muslims | 22,281 | 23,673 |
Bosnian Croats | 116 | 41 |
other ethnic groups | 1,064 | 567 |
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Total | 36,609 | 24,356 |
(1) Census 1991. (2) Figures provided by the local government. |
(Homepage of Hans Koschnik, commissary of the German government for the return of the refugees in Bosnia)
Karadjordje
Karadjordje
Karadjordje
Only the Serbian Fundamentalists here on FR.
Yes. How many times do I have to say "Serb propaganda" before it sinks in?
Every neutral document from the international community and the US Government place the blame squarely where it belongs, on the heads of Milosevic, Karadzic, Seselj and Mladic and their ganymedes in the Serb armies in their various guises (Bosnian Serb Army/VRS, Jugoslavian National Army, Serb paramilitaries like Arkan's Tigers, et al).
Yes. All the time. Fundamentalists named Karadjordje, Joan, Destro, et al.
Every neutral document from the international community and the US Government place the blame squarely where it belongs, ..."
Oooohh,aaah ALL EVIL SERBIAN Propaganda ... because US Government (killed over 2,000 Yugoslav civlians) isn't biased and isn't interested in such things (only when this Government of truthfulness says for examlple that 500,000 Albanians died in Kosovo):
Uproar over Film "Storm over Krajina" (Croatian article from aimpress) (<- click)
Uproar by Croats - why such a reaction Muja?
Karadjordje
Nice hot pants on the photo, where did I get them?
From Osama Bin Laden?
Karadjordje
What do you know from former multiethnic Yugolsalvia - before the war began, during the war -- nothing, just nothing, just ridiculous.
Pozdrav
Karadjordje
Riiight. There aren't 500,000 Albanians IN Kosovo. The US Gov't never made such a claim. The true number is on the order of 5,000 at the hands of the Serb paramilitaries. Not much, you might think, but that's 1% of the Albanian population: equivalent of about, oh, 2.85 million here in the States.
At the time the news that Western leaders claimed to have from Kosovo was indeed truly terrifying. As a senior administration official explained to The New York Times (4 April), 'There may be 50 Srebrenicas' (or in other words 350,000 dead). On ABC television news (18 April) another official claimed that, 'Tens of thousands of young males may have been executed in Kosovo.' The next day the State Department announced that 500,000 Albanian Kosovars 'are missing and feared dead.'
These figures were promptly taken up by French television. Jean-Pierre Pernaut, for instance, mentioned '100,000 to 500,000 people who are thought to have been killed, but that is in the conditional' (TF1, 20 April). The following evening the same channel announced, 'According to Nato, 100,000 to 500,000 men are reported missing. It is feared that they have been executed by the Serbs ... Of course, we have yet to prove this accusation.' Radio was keen to join in as well. On France Inter the journalist accredited to Nato enthusiastically passed on reports according to which 'hundreds of boys are being used as live blood banks, thousands of others are digging graves or trenches and the women are being systematically raped' (20 April, 7 pm news).
In the articles penned by French intellectuals on the Nato side the indicative mood soon replaced the conditional. Antoine Garapon, a magistrate, secretary general of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, president of the Kosovo committee and member of the editorial staff of Esprit, wrote, 'We cannot put the thousand or so Serb victims on the same footing as the hundreds of thousands of Kosovars who have been massacred' (Télérama, 23 June). He was already one step behind the official line. Once the war had been won, Western estimates of Albanian dead dropped from six to five figure numbers. On 17 June the Foreign Office in London stated that '10,000 people had been killed in more than 100 massacres'. On 25 June Clinton confirmed the figure of 10,000 Kosovars killed by the Serbs (The Nation, 8 November). On 2 August, following his appointment as Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary General, Bernard Kouchner spoke of 11,000 Kosovars discovered in mass graves but the International Criminal Tribunal for former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague refuted the statement the same day. Even Le Monde diplomatique unwisely claimed in its August leader that 'half of the feared 10,000 victims have been exhumed.'"
Le Monde diplomatique, LESSONS OF WAR - Media and disinformation, March 2000
Karadjordje
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