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Christian Dating :
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Geography
Area: 51,233 sq. km, slightly smaller than West Virginia.
Cities: Capital--Sarajevo (est. pop 387,876); Banja Luka
(220,407); Mostar (208,904); Tuzla (118,500); Bihac (49,544).
Terrain: Mountains in the central and southern regions, plains along the
Sava River in the north.
Climate: Hot summers and cold winters; areas of high elevation have
short, cool summers and long, severe winters; mild, rainy winters in the
southeast.
People
Nationalities: Bosniak (Muslim), Bosnian Croat, Bosnian Serb.
Population (July 2002 est.): 3,964,388 (note: all data dealing with
population are subject to considerable error because of the dislocations
caused by military action and ethnic cleansing).
Population growth rate (2002 est.): 0.76%.
Ethnic groups: Bosniak 48.3%, Serb 34.0%, Croat 15.4%, others 2.3%.
(Source: UNDP Human Development Report 2002--Bosnia-Herzegovina)
Christian singles note-Religions: Muslim (40%);
Orthodox (31%); Catholic (15%); Protestant (4%); other (10%).
Languages: Bosnian, Serbian, Croatian (formerly
"Serbo-Croatian").
Education: Mandatory 8 years of primary school, 4 years in secondary
school, and 4 years in universities and academies. In Bosnia and
Herzegovina, there are 407 primary schools with 250,000 students, 171
secondary schools with 80,000 students, 6 universities in the major
cities (Sarajevo, Mostar, Banja Luka, Tuzla, and Bihac) and 6 academies
(4 pedagogic and 2 art academies).
Education: Adult literacy rate--male 94.1%, female 78.0%.
Health: Infant mortality rate--23.53 deaths/1,000. Life
expectancy--male 71.0, female 75.0.
Work force (total): 633,860.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Constitution: The Dayton Agreement, signed December 14, 1995, included a
new constitution now in force.
Independence: April 1992 (from Yugoslavia).
Branches: Executive--Chairman of the Presidency and two other
members of three-member rotating presidency (chief of state), Chairman
of the Council of Ministers (head of government), Council of Ministers
(cabinet). Legislative--bicameral parliamentary assembly,
consisting of national House of Representatives and House of Peoples
(parliament). Judicial--Supreme Court, Constitutional Court, both
supervised by the Ministry of Justice.
Christian singles note-Subdivisions: Two
entities: Muslim/Croat Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (divided
into 10 cantons) and Republika Srpska.
Political parties: Party of Democratic Action (SDA); Croatian Democratic
Union of BiH (HDZ-BiH); Serb Democratic Party (SDS); Party for Bosnia
and Herzegovina (SBiH); Civic Democratic Party (GDS); Croatian Peasants'
Party of BiH (HSS); Independent Social Democratic Party (SNSD); Liberal
Party (LS); Republican Party of Bosnia and Herzegovina (RS); Serb Civic
Council (SGV); Social Democratic Party (SDP); Socialist Party of
Republika Srpska (SPRS); Democratic Socialist Party (DSP); Social
Democrats of Bosnia Herzegovina; Party for Democratic Progress (PDP);
National Democratic Union (DNZ); Serb National Alliance (SNS); Coalition
for a United and Democratic BiH (coalition of SDA, SBiH, LS, and GDS).
Suffrage: Universal at age 18.
Economy
GDP (2001 est., purchasing power parity): $4.7 billion.
GDP growth rate ( 2001 est.): 2.3%.
Income per capita (1997 est., purchasing power parity): $1,800 (note:
figure heavily depends on the population and does not account for the
gray economy).
Inflation rate (2001 est.): 5.0%.
Natural resources: Coal, iron, bauxite, manganese, forests, copper,
chromium, lead, zinc.
Agriculture: Products--wheat, corn, fruits, vegetables,
livestock.
Industry: Types--steel, minerals, vehicle assembly, textiles,
tobacco products, wooden furniture, tank and aircraft assembly, domestic
appliances, oil refining.
Trade (1995): Exports--$1,003 million.
PEOPLE AND HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS
Christian singles note-The three main ethnic
groups in present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina are Bosniak, Serb, and
Croat, and languages are Bosnian, Serbian, and Croatian (formerly
"Serbo-Croatian"). Nationalities are Bosniak (Muslim),
Bosnian Serb, and Bosnian Croat. Religions include Islam, Serb
Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, Judaism, some Protestant sects, and some
others.
For the first centuries of the Christian era, Bosnia was part of the
Roman Empire. After the fall of Rome, Bosnia was contested by Byzantium
and Rome's successors in the west. Slavs settled the region in the 7th
century, and the kingdoms of Serbia and Croatia split control of Bosnia
in the 9th century. The 11th and 12th centuries saw the rule of the
region by the kingdom of Hungary. The medieval kingdom of Bosnia gained
its independence around 1200 A.D. Bosnia remained independent until
1463, when Ottoman Turks conquered the region.
During Ottoman rule, many Bosnians converted from Christianity
in favor of Islam. Bosnia was under Ottoman rule until 1878, when it was
given to Austria-Hungary as a colony. While those living in Bosnia came
under rule by the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, South Slavs in Serbia and
elsewhere were calling for a South Slav state. World War I began when
Serb nationalist Gavrilo Princip assassinated the Archduke Ferdinand in
Sarajevo. Following the Great War, Bosnia became part of the South Slav
state of Yugoslavia, only to be given to Nazi-puppet Croatia in World
War II. During this period, many atrocities were committed against Jews,
Serbs, and others who resisted the occupation. The Cold War saw the
establishment of the Communist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia under
Josip Broz Tito, and the reestablishment of Bosnia as a republic with
its medieval borders within the federation of Yugoslavia.
Yugoslavia's unraveling was hastened by the rise of Slobodan
Milosevic to power in 1986. Milosevic's embrace of Serb nationalism led
to intrastate ethnic strife. Slovenia and Croatia both declared
independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. In February 1992, the
Bosnian Government held a referendum on independence. Bosnia's
parliament declared the republic's independence on April 5, 1992.
However, this move was opposed by Serb representatives who favored
remaining in Yugoslavia. Bosnian Serbs, supported by neighboring Serbia,
responded with armed resistance in an effort to partition the republic
along ethnic lines to create a "greater Serbia." Full
recognition of its independence by the United States and most European
countries occurred on April 7, and Bosnia-Herzegovina was admitted to
the United Nations on May 22, 1992.
In March 1994, Muslims and Croats in Bosnia signed an agreement
creating the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. This narrowed the
field of warring parties down to two. The conflict continued through
most of 1995, ending with the Dayton Peace Agreement being signed on
November 21, 1995 (the final version was signed December 14, 1995 in
Paris). Bosnia and Herzegovina today consists of two entities -- the
Muslim/Croat Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which is largely
Bosniak and Croat, and the Republika Srpska, which is primarily Serb.
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