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This section contains 3,466 words (approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page) |
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Three-member presidency with rotating chairmanship
Left: Dragan Covic (Croat)
Middle: Barislov Paravac (Serb)
Right: Sulejman Tihic (Bosniak, Muslim)
Bosnia-Herzegovina, one of five successor states to the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY), is located in southeastern Europe, between Croatia to the north and west and Serbia and Montenegro (which has also been known as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) to the east. Its land area is 51,129 sq km (19,741 sq mi). Bosnia refers to the entire republic, except for the mountainous southwestern region of Herzegovina.
The population of Bosnia was estimated at 3.9 million in 2002, of whom 48% are Bosniaks, 37% ethnic Serbs, and 14% ethnic Croats. The breakdown of Muslim (40%), Serbian Orthodox (31%), and Roman Catholic (15%) religious communities closely corresponds to the ethnic breakdown. Before the 1992–95 war, many parts of Bosnia-Herzegovina resembled an ethnic patchwork. "Ethnic cleansing" and displacement of hundreds...
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This section contains 3,466 words (approx. 12 pages at 300 words per page) |
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