Mostar

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Mostar
Image:Coat of arms of Mostar.gif
CantonHerzegovina-Neretva Canton
Mayor Ljubo Beslic
Area

 1,100 km²
Population
 - City (2004)
 - Density

105,448

95.86/km²

www.mostar.ba

Image:Mostar1.jpg

Mostar (Cyrillic: Мостар) is a city in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the center of the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation. The unofficial capital of Herzegovina, Mostar is situated on the Neretva river and is the fourth-largest city in the country.

Mostar was named after its Old Bridge (Stari most) and the towers on its sides, "the bridge keepers" (natively: mostari).

Contents

Demographics

In 1991 the municipality of Mostar had a population of 126,066. The ethnic distribution was; Bosniak (34.65%), Croat (33.83%), Serb (18.97%), Yugoslav (10.03%) and 2.32% others. Mostar itself had 75,865 inhabitants. In 2003 the population was 105,448.Ethnic distribution was; Bosniaks (47.43%), Croat (48.29%), Serb (3.45%) and .83% others. The city has had a carefully elaborated policy of national equality ever since the end of the war. The Croat and Bosniak ethnic communities each claim one side of the river and even support for the local football clubs, Zrinjski and Velež, is divided along ethnic lines. One Bosnian politician called mostar "divided by a wall between Croats and Bosniaks" in an interview to RTV Slovenia.

History

Early history

Founded in the late 15th century, Mostar was the chief administrative city for the Ottoman Empire in the Herzegovina region. The Austro-Hungarian Empire absorbed Mostar in 1878 and then it became part of Yugoslavia in the aftermath of World War I. Since 1881 Mostar has been the seat of the Bishopric of Mostar-Duvno.

Yugoslav Period

After World War II, Mostar developed a production of tobacco, bauxite, wine and aluminium products. Several dams ("Grabovica", "Salakovac", "Mostar") were built in the region to harness the hydroelectric power of the Neretva. The city was a major industrial and tourist center and prospered during the time of SFRY.

Bosnian war

1992 JNA Siege

Between 1992 and 1993, after Bosnia and Herzegovina declared independence from Yugoslavia, the town was subject to a nine month siege. The Yugoslav People's Army (JNA) first bombed Mostar on April 3rd, 1992 and over the following week gradually established control over a large part of the town. On April 8th, the Herzegovina Croats founded the Croatian Defense Council (Hrvatsko Vijeće Obrane, HVO) as their military formation which engaged the JNA forces in combat. The JNA shelling damaged or destroyed a number of civilian objects. Among them were a Franciscan monastery, the Catholic cathedral and the bishop's palace, with a library of 50,000 books, as well as the Karadžoz-bey mosque, Roznamed-ij-Ibrahim-efendija mosque and twelve other mosques. On June 12th, the HVO military force amassed enough weaponry and manpower to force the JNA troops out of Mostar, together with several smaller formations made up of Bosniaks. The 4th Corps of the Army of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the primary military formation of the Bosniaks, was founded the same year in Mostar. During the siege that ensued, the city was bombarded by the Bosnian Serbs from the mountains to the east.

The Bosniak-Croat War

In 1993, the Bosnian Croats launched an attempt to take the entire city. The city was to be the big prize and the capital of Herzeg-Bosnia. The result was a bloody and bitter struggle with the Bosniaks. The Bosnian Croats launched an offensive on May 9th, and ethnically cleansed Bosniaks across the Neretva river into the eastern part of the city. Once the western side was under Croat control, they began a savage bombardment of the east side, reducing much of it to ruin and causing hundreds of civilian deaths. Many cultural and religious objects were intentionally destroyed, including numerous mosques and houses from the Ottoman era, including the Kujundžiluk. The 16th century stone bridge Stari Most that had been built by Mimar Hayruddin, by order from emperor Suleiman the Magnificent, was destroyed on November 9th by Bosnian Croat mortar fire. The Croats also destroyed the Serbian Orthodox monastery in Žitomislići.

During this conflict Croats established a concentration camp for Bosniaks on Mostar's Heliodrome.

A cease-fire was signed on February 25th, 1994. The city remained divided between the two hostile parties. Some normalization ensued with a redistricting in 1995 and reestablishment of the ability to move between the two parts of the city in 1996.

Reconstruction

Image:MostarBridge.JPG Image:Mostar03.jpg Since the end of the wider war in 1995, great progress is being made in the reconstruction of the city of Mostar. The city was under direct monitoring from a European Union envoy, several elections were held and each nation was accommodated with regard to political control over the city. Over 15 million dollars has been spent on restoration.

A monumental project to rebuild the Old Bridge to the original design, and restore surrounding structures was initiated in 1999 and mostly completed by Spring 2004. The money for this reconstruction was donated by the United States, Turkey, Italy, the Netherlands, and Croatia. A grand opening was held on July 23, 2004 under heavy security.

In July 2005, UNESCO finally inscribed the Old Bridge and its closest vicinity on the World Heritage List. Previously, the inscription had been repeatedly deferred on account of poor quality of post-war reconstructions and deplorable use of modern materials in the old town.

Education and Culture

There is a project underway to create in the Mostar Gymnasium a United World College, starting September 2006.

University of Mostar

Džemal Bijedić University

Pavarotti Music Center

Gymnasium Mostar

"Gradska" Library(Rondo,Mostar)

"Dječja i Narodna" Library(Carina,Mostar)

Cultural Center Mostar(ul.Rade Bitange,Mostar)

"Dom herceg-Stjepana Kosače" cultural Center(Rondo,Mostar)

Gallery "Aluminij"(near by hospital by building Uglovnica)

Template:Herzegovina-Neretva Canton

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