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
16 Apr 2003
Belgrade (dpa) - The United Nations administration in Kosovo (UNMIK) said Wednesday that so far 145 out of 4,000 bodies exhumed in the province since the end of the war have been identified, the private Beta news agency reported.
A total of 4,300 people have been reported missing since 1999, most of them ethnic Albanians, said chief of the UNMIK department for missing persons, Jose Pablo Baraibar.
The list was not yet fully 'consolidated' and UNMIK has been working on it with Belgrade, he said.
According to available data, 909 of the missing were non-Albanians, but the figure was expected to rise, as Serbs recently added another 350 names to it.
Barabair said no mass graves have been found in Kosovo, the site of a bloody conflict between Belgrade's security forces and ethnic Albanian guerrillas in 1998 and 1999, but that more individual burial sites were expected to be found.
The fighting was accompanied by a wave of terror by the security forces and outright expulsions of civilians which led to an exodus of refugees to Albania and Macedonia.
The conflict was ended after NATO bombed Slobodan Milosevic's regime into accepting an international peacekeeping presence in June 1999."
dpa bb bg
Copyright (c) dpa Deutsche Presse-Agentur GmbH
Karadjordje
2 lies in 2 sentences, and your face don't turn red.
Karadjordje
"[...] the US said that between 2,000 and 3,000 Iraqis had been killed in the three-hour incursion into the city on Saturday, by the 3rd Infantry Division and two squadrons of tanks."
The Independent, Baghdad braced for the assault, 07 April 2003 (<- click)
The U.S. Government kills as many as 3,000 people in 3 hours- rate of upto 1,000 people per hour. The U.S. Government killed more Iraqis in that 3 hours than Albanians killed by Serbs for the entire 2 years of the Kosovo war, right?
Karadjordje
Do you know the article "The Cruelest Cleansings" (<- click)
Ooooh, be careful, it's again a Serbian site...ooohh...
Karadjordje
145 are identified, hm.
You would say, that they all were civilians?
Hm, all Albanien?
Karadjordje
Oh, that you don't have to exlpain to me - 1,900 Muslim Fighters who slaughtered 1,200 Serbs are worse than these 1,200 Serb Civilians, I know.
Karadjordje
So let us loot to Rudare, Kosovo:
homeagain balkansvet wrote:
"Look up the definitions of the following words: "Civilian" and "Military.""
So Let us loot to Rudare, Kosovo:
AP, April 15, 2002
By DRAGAN ILIC, Associated Press Writer
RUDARE, Yugoslavia - Hundreds of relatives of Serbs missing since the end of Kosovo´s war examined clothes, wedding rings and cigarette cases Sunday, hoping to determine the fate of loved ones believed slain in the province.
Families streamed into a pair of tents erected near a motel in southern Serbia to view items U.N. forensics investigators uncovered after the fighting ended in 1999. The relatives donned surgical masks to guard against infection while looking at items found with 360 corpses unearthed at sites throughout the southern Yugoslav province.
Some 1,300 Serbs have been reported missing since former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic ´s 1998-1999 crackdown on ethnic Albanians in Kosovo. Most of those people are presumed to be dead.
U.N. officials in recent months have promised to do more to determine the fate of the missing, both Serbs and ethnic Albanians. An estimated 3,000 ethnic Albanians are also still unaccounted for nearly three years after NATO bombing halted Milosevic´s crackdown and drove out Yugoslav government forces.[...]"
So let's look to another place: Dragodan, Kosovo:
From 'Blic,' Belgrade, Yugoslavia (Serbian Newspaper)
August 22, 2000
PRISTINA - In the Pristina suburb of Dragodan 160 bodies have been found which are suspected to be victims of Albanian terrorists during the past year, since the deployment of UNMIK and KFOR, Blic has learned from members of families of kidnapped and missing Serbs and Romanies who received invitations to identify the discovered bodies. Vesna Mulici identified the body of her husband, Ramo Mulici, whose body was among those exhumed at Dragodan.
'I saw many identity cards with the names of Serbs and photographs while I was attempting to identify the belongings of my husband,' she told Blic. At UNMIK headquarters no one wished to either confirm or deny this information but a invitation was repeated for relatives and friends of the missing and kidnapped to come to Pristina and help the Committee for Missing and Disappeared Persons to identify 159 more bodies found at Dragodan.Strong KFOR forces until recently secured this gravesite and prevented uncontrolled entry to the Dragodan cemetery."
Karadjordje
So let's again look to another place: Suva Reka, Kosovo:
The fact is that the 188 graves at the UNMIK gravesite in Suva Reka/Suharekë contain unidentified bodies exhumed and reburied in 2000 by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY). The Suva Reka/Suharekë gravesite contains no new bodies and no new mass grave has been uncovered in Kosovo.
Of the 3,900 bodies exhumed by ICTY, 1,256 remain unidentified. These bodies have been reburied in the municipalities where they were found, either in UNMIK graveyards like the one at Suva Reka/Suharekë or in municipal graveyards. The visit to Suva Reka/Suharekë allowed the Serbian delegation to see the situation for themselves.
Susan Manuel, UNMIK Spokesperson, who accompanied the delegation, assured them that the bodies were at no risk. 'Each community knows that these bodies could belong to them so they are very respectful of the graves,' she said.
Gradimir Nalic, Advisor to the President of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia on the issue of missing persons, was part of the delegation that came from Belgrade. 'I'm glad that UNMIK allowed us to come see the site and we see that it has a fence and the graves are marked and mapped,' he said. 'The new government of Yugoslavia is trying to raise the level of cooperation with UNMIK on the issue of missing persons. Whether these unidentified people are Albanian, Roma or Serbian, is not the point. What's important is finding out who they are and letting their families know,' he continued.
Finding Kosovo's missing is one of UNMIK's top priorities. On Tuesday, 24 July, SRSG Hans Haekkerup signed an agreement with the Sarajevo-based International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP), an organization funded by the US State Department, to begin working together and using DNA testing to further efforts to match unidentified bodies with their families.
The collaboration with ICMP will give UNMIK access to DNA testing and sophisticated computer software to match post-mortem and ante-mortem data. The matching of post- mortem data (items collected from the body) with ante- mortem data (information taken from families) is how bodies are identified.
From now on all work on identifying missing persons will be handled by UNMIK Police's Missing Persons Unit (MPU), who will work in tandem with the ICMP. In addition to the 1,256 ICTY bodies, the MPU and ICMP will work on identifying bodies from 33 soon-to-be-excavated gravesites in Kosovo and bodies from recently discovered mass graves in Serbia.
'Although we will have sophisticated new methods at our disposal for identifying bodies, this is still not a guarantee,' says Monique Fienberg, Officer-in-Charge at OHRCA. 'The most important step remains for each family missing someone to come forward to the police and give as much information as possible about their loved one. This information, called ante-mortem data, is the key to identifying bodies. Without this, even the most sophisticated methods in the world won't work.'
In an appeal to those in Gracanica to stop their hunger strike over missing persons, Susan Manuel said: 'We have heard your message and we are doing all we can. It is slow-going, but there is no conspiracy.'"
July 21, 2001
Belgrade, July 21 - The Federal Committee for Kosovo-Metohija Subcommittee for missing persons Vladimir Bozovic confirmed on Friday that he had received from the UNMIK data on the existence of a mass grave in Suva Reka, containing 850-900 bodies.
At the meeting of the joint commission of the UNMIK and the Federal Committee in Pristina, the representatives of the Interim Administration Mission in Kazoo showed us an official document containing information on the mass grave in Suva Reka, Bozovic told the Radio B92.
[...]
Some UNMIK officials denied on Friday the report on the mass grave in Suva Reka, claming there was no mass grave and that the statement of the head of the Missing and Detained Persons , Monique Feinberg, had been misinterpreted.
The Radio B92, repeats, however, Feinberg's statement that there was 'a much larger and enclosed mass grave in Suva Reka.'
'Some 850-900 bodies have been buried there. The corpses are unidentified, which means that we have no way of knowing the identities of the buried. They could belong to any ethnicity; however, we suspect those are the bodies of the Serbs and members of minority communities,' Feinberg said. [...]"
www.serbia-info.com/news (<- click)
Karadjordje
So let's again look to another place: Gnilanje, Kosovo:
"[...] A UN war crimes tribunal team was investigating Wednesday a grave in eastern Kosovo containing 11 corpses, some of which were identified as Serbian, a spokesman for the Kosovo peacekeeping force said. The US-led Multinational Brigade of the Kosovo peacekeeping force (KFOR) discovered the grave Tuesday in Ugljare, five kilometers (three miles) south of Gnilane, KFOR spokesman Roland Lavoie said. [...]"
AFP, August 02, 1999
As far as I know - please correct me - they closed this very first (08/1999) mass grave after further investiagtion.
Karadjordje
Go to www.google.com (<- click) and type in:
1) "Srebrenica"
2) "Ibran"
3) "Mustafic"
5) "Slobodna"
6) "Bosna"
And while you are at it, search:
1) "Srebrenica"
2) "Drazen"
3) "Erdemovic"
Who are this people?
Karadjordje
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