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
Have you ever compared the data of Hans Koschnik (<- click), commissary of the German government for the return of the refugees in Bosnia with the date provided by Milivoje Ivanisevic (<- click)
Not - than compare it, and tell me more.
Karadjordje
How about the statements of George Kenney, former State Department undersecretary (1992) in charge of the Yugoslav desk and of Lt Gen Satish Nambiar (Retd.), First Force Commander and Head of Mission of the United Nations Forces deployed in the former Yugoslavia (<- click).
Do you know how long it takes to become a general?
Karadjordje
So why you don't show me:
Here is the list (<- click).
Karadjordje
If I can, I will go that village where the Muslims decapitated the Serbian childrens head in front of UNPROFOR. The Selo is in Muslim-occupied zone at this time.
That stench is pig you smell, came directly from Constantinople, or Istanbul in modern day names.
If you are unable to come up with the grids, you were not there at the scene. The Vast MAJORITY of IFOR soldiers have and maintained their own log book. You claim to be JAG(Former), then you will definately have that log book and topo maps. Break it out, or you dont have one?
You are phony, bulletboy.
I understand, Tirane Law School has open enrollment, is that where you have your (f)Law Degree from?
What did he write, has anyone this still in his cache?
Karadjordje
Karadjordje
Idiots need'nt be foaming at the mouth with vile anti-Serbian diatribes anyways, not when you are unable to back up those words they have chosen.
Hello PiP PiP Cherrio, another one, KZ Celebici, Bosnia:
AFP, October 09, 2001
THE HAGUE, Oct 9, 2001 (AFP)
The UN war crimes tribunal was scheduled Tuesday to pass sentence on two Bosnian Muslims and a Croat found guilty of crimes against Serb prisoners in a detention camp in the Bosnian town of Celebici.
Hazim Delic, 37, and Esad Landzo, 28, were the first Muslims to be convicted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) for murder, torture and sexual assault committed in a detention camp for Serbs set up by Muslims and Croats in Bosnia in 1992.
All three had previously been convicted by the ICTY in 1998. Delic, Landzo and their Croat co-accused Zdravko Mucic, 37, received to 20, 15 and seven years imprisonment respectively.
The ICTY appeals chamber partly confirmed the guilty verdict against the three last Febuary, but could not fix new sentences because of unresolved legal issues.
The defendants were originally found guilty on two charges -- violation of the laws and customs of war and violations of the 1949 Geneva convention on the wartime treatment of civilians-- for one specific incident.
The appeals chamber ruled that was unjust and referred the case back to a lower court for sentencing. Tuesday´s sentence can be appealed again.
The prosecution has asked for the sentences of 20 and 15 years for Delic and Landzo to be upheld and wants that on Mucic to be raised to 10 years to take into account his role as camp commander responsible for the acts of his subordinates.
For years the Celebici suspects were the only Muslim detainees in the ICTY jail.
This year Delic and Landzo were joined by four high-ranking Bosnian Muslim generals, including the wartime commander of the Muslim-led Bosnian government army, Sefer Halilovic."
Karadjordje
"Camps played an important role in such deportation of the Serbs. Even though there were a few hundred prisoners camps in the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina controlled by the Muslims and the Croats, nevertheless, when taking into account the size of the territory and the number of Serbian population, Herzegovina was the one with the highest concentration of camps. In their practice the Croats have applied their fascist experience from the World War II. Even though all data have not yet been properly processed, and at some places even not collected and assorted, the estimates say that at lest 10.000 Serbs stayed in the camps. Their hardships inflicted by the regimes by which the camps were managed, various forms of torture and maltreatment, poor nourishment, lack of medicines and treatment by camp staff did not differ from the fate and position of prisoners in the concentration camps of Hitlers Germany or Pavelic Independent State of Croatia. Lynch, all forms of humiliation and killing prisoners were ordinary every day routine. Let us remind that in the period 1992-1996 in this territory there were notorious prisoners camps: Dretelj, Rodoc, Musala and Celebici and that apart from few hundred other criminals it was already mentioned Zejnil Delalic, with his assistants, who was at best in his criminal affinity. Zejnil Delalic was a coordinator of the Muslim actions and a trustee of Alija Izetbegovic in charge of one part of this territory."
Milivoje Ivanisevic -- EXPULSION OF THE SERBS FROM BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA 1992-1995 (<- click)
Karadjordje
Report P1: SERBIAN WOMEN AS VICTIMS OF WAR (Sanda Raskovic, MD, Ph.D. ) (<- click)
Report P4: Report of Bishop Lukijan of Slavonia (Bishop Lukijan of Slavonia ) May 1995 (<- click)
Source (remark for homeagain balkansvet) : http://www.balkan-archive.org.yu
Karadjordje
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