A girl carries jugs of water down a street destroyed by Croat shelling near the old bridge in the eastern (Muslim) part of Mostar, 30 March 1994 (AFP/Getty) You can freeze-frame every moment of the ...
Setting an example of postwar cooperation, police officers from two World War II adversaries have begun jointly patrolling Mostar’s battle-maimed streets to keep civic order. Croatian and Muslim ...
A graceful bridge, blown up, where lovers will never meet. An apartment house, riddled by bullets, where families will never live. A mosque, its dome collapsed, in which worshipers will never pray.
Smail Klaric, who heads the war council in the besieged Muslim quarter of this Bosnian city, ticked off the reasons why his people could never again trust their erstwhile allies, the Bosnian Croats.
BIRN’s series about women photographers documenting the Bosnian war profiles Isabella Balena, whose pictures captured the impact of the fighting that divided and devastated the picturesque city of ...
At an exhumation in the village of Medjine in the Mostar area, investigators have discovered the remains of 15 people who are believed to have died during the war in 1994. This post is also available ...
The 70-year-old Muslim cleared a path Tuesday through his friend's second-story apartment, righting toppled chairs and picking broken picture frames and shelving from a tumble of drapes, lamps and ...
The European Union took over administration of divided Mostar on Saturday as part of international efforts to cement a Muslim-Croat alliance and pressure Serbs to accept a peace plan. But reports of ...
BERLIN – Hans Koschnick, who served as the European Union's administrator of the bitterly divided Bosnian city of Mostar, has died. He was 87. Koschnick, a Social Democrat who governed the German city ...
Bishop Ratko Peric is losing his congregation, slowly and painfully. Some have left, others are unreachable, still others dead. Peric is the bishop of Mostar, the onetime capital of Herzegovina in ...
The survivors of a concentration and labor camp in Mostar, Bosnia are opposed to plans to turn the site into a museum honoring the army that incarcerated and tortured them. Survivors of one of the ...
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