Brčko
Brčko (Cyrillic: Брчко, pronounced [br̩̂tʃkoː]) is a city and the administrative seat of Brčko District, in northern Bosnia and Herzegovina. It lies on the banks of Sava river across from Croatia. As of 2013, it has a population of 83,516 inhabitants, while the city of Brčko has a population of 39,893 inhabitants.
Brčko Брчко | |
---|---|
Brčko | |
Brčko Location within Bosnia and Herzegovina | |
Coordinates: 44.87709°N 18.81096°E | |
Country | |
District | Brčko District |
Government | |
• Mayor | Siniša Milić (SNSD) |
• President of the District Assembly | Esed Kadrić (SDA) |
• International Supervisor (Suspended) | Michael Scanlan |
Area | |
• City | 402 km2 (155 sq mi) |
Elevation | 92 m (302 ft) |
Population (2013 census)[1] | |
• City | 83,516 |
• Density | 210/km2 (540/sq mi) |
• Urban | 43,007 |
Postcode | 76100 |
Area code(s) | +387 049 |
Website | Official website |
Brčko is the only entirely self-governing free city currently in existence in Europe.[2]
Name
Its name is very likely linked to the Breuci (Greek Βρεῦκοι), a subtribe of Pannonian tribes of the Illyrians who migrated to the vicinity of today's Brčko from the territories of the Yamnaya culture in the 3rd millennium BC. Breuci greatly resisted the Romans but were conquered in 1st century BC and a lot of them were sold as slaves after their defeat. They started receiving Roman citizenship during Trajan's rule.
A number of Breuci migrated and settled in Dacia, where a town called Bereck or Brețcu, a river (Brețcu River) and a mountain Munții Brețcului in today's Romania were named after them.[3]
Geography
The city is located on the country's northern border, across the Sava River from Gunja in Croatia.
Brčko is the seat of the Brčko District, an independent unit of local self-government created on the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina following an arbitration process. The local administration was formerly supervised by an international supervisory regime headed by Principal Deputy High Representative who is also ex officio the Brčko International Supervisor. This international supervision was frozen since 23 May 2012.[4]
History
Brčko was a geographic point of contention in 1996 when the U.S.-led Implementation Force (IFOR) built Camp McGovern on the outskirts of the city. Camp McGovern under the overwatch of 3-5 CAV 1/BDE/1AR Division (US) commanded by LTC Anthony Cucculo was constructed from a war torn farming cooperative structure in the Zone of Separation (ZOS) for the purpose of establishing peacekeeping operations. The mission was to separate the forming warring factions. The ZOS was one kilometer wide of no man's land, where special permission was required for Serbian or Bosnian forces to enter. Various checkpoints and observation points (OP's) were established to control the separation.
Although Brčko was a focal point for tension in the late 1990s, considerable progress in multi-ethnic integration in Brčko has since occurred including integration of secondary schooling. Reconstruction efforts and the Property Law Implementation Plan have improved the situation regarding property and return. Today, Brčko has returned to a strategic transshipment point along the Sava River. The population of Brčko has not returned to its pre-war ethnic mix of Bosniacs, Serbs, and Croats. Brčko sits at the east-west apex of Republika Srpska, the ethnic Serb portion of Bosnia & Herzegovina, and as such is critical to the RS for its economic future.
Brčko was one of the main points discussed in the Dayton Peace Accords. After several weeks of intensive negotiation, the issue of Brčko was to be decided by international arbitration. Brčko Arbitration ruled in May 1997 that Brčko would be a special district managed by an ambassadorial representative from the international community. The first Ambassador to Brčko was an American with support staff from the UK, Sweden, Denmark & France.
The first international organization to open office in Brčko at that time was the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) headed by Randolph Hampton.
Following PIC meeting on 23 May 2012, it was decided to suspend, not terminate, the mandate of Brčko International Supervisor. Brčko Arbitral Tribunal, together with the suspended Brčko Supervision, will still continue to exist.[4]
Demographics
Population
Population of settlements – Brčko district | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Settlement | 1948. | 1953. | 1961. | 1971. | 1981. | 1991. | 2013. | |
Total | 49,969 | 65,078 | 62,952 | 74,771 | 82,768 | 87,627 | 83,516 | |
1 | Bijela | 2,539 | 1,923 | |||||
2 | Boće | 1,253 | 1,270 | |||||
3 | Boderište | 965 | 661 | |||||
4 | Brčko | 17,949 | 25,337 | 31,437 | 41,406 | 39,893 | ||
5 | Brezik | 413 | 601 | |||||
6 | Brezovo Polje | 335 | 1,292 | |||||
7 | Brezovo Polje Selo | 1,393 | 251 | |||||
8 | Brka | 2,044 | 2,234 | |||||
9 | Brod | 1,042 | 1,286 | |||||
10 | Buzekara | 430 | 268 | |||||
11 | Čande | 377 | 321 | |||||
12 | Cerik | 280 | 233 | |||||
13 | Čoseta | 507 | 732 | |||||
14 | Donji Rahić | 647 | 366 | |||||
15 | Donji Zovik | 481 | 494 | |||||
16 | Dubrave | 1,338 | 1,463 | |||||
17 | Dubravice Donje | 396 | 315 | |||||
18 | Gorice | 1,097 | 654 | |||||
19 | Gornji Rahić | 2,167 | 3,403 | |||||
20 | Gornji Zovik | 1,569 | 1,408 | |||||
21 | Grbavica | 557 | 1,527 | |||||
22 | Gredice | 303 | 1,109 | |||||
23 | Krepšić | 1,156 | 696 | |||||
24 | Laništa | 656 | 450 | |||||
25 | Maoča | 2,886 | 3,030 | |||||
26 | Marković Polje | 470 | 370 | |||||
27 | Ograđenovac | 734 | 815 | |||||
28 | Omerbegovača | 895 | 1,074 | |||||
29 | Palanka | 1,394 | 1,439 | |||||
30 | Potočari | 893 | 1,063 | |||||
31 | Rašljani | 1,155 | 1,078 | |||||
32 | Ražljevo | 341 | 233 | |||||
33 | Repino Brdo | 246 | 247 | |||||
34 | Sandići | 420 | 430 | |||||
35 | Šatorovići | 1,238 | 1,472 | |||||
36 | Skakava Donja | 2,272 | 2,037 | |||||
37 | Skakava Gornja | 1,737 | 1,352 | |||||
38 | Slijepčevići | 371 | 298 | |||||
39 | Stanovi | 353 | 238 | |||||
40 | Štrepci | 861 | 712 | |||||
41 | Trnjaci | 313 | 245 | |||||
42 | Ulice | 1,266 | 892 | |||||
43 | Ulovići | 912 | 752 | |||||
44 | Vitanovići Donji | 419 | 396 | |||||
45 | Vučilovac | 700 | 254 | |||||
46 | Vukšić Donji | 644 | 352 | |||||
47 | Vukšić Gornji | 821 | 579 |
Ethnic composition
Ethnic composition – Brčko city | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013. | 1991. | 1981. | 1971. | 1961. | |||
Total | 39,893 (100,0%) | 41,406 (100,0%) | 31,437 (100,0%) | 25,337 (100,0%) | 17,949 (100,0%) | ||
Serbs | 19,420 (48,68%) | 8,253 (19,93%) | 5,532 (17,60%) | 5,481 (21,63%) | 5,260 (29,31%) | ||
Bosniaks | 17,489 (43,84%) | 22,994 (55,53%) | 16,725 (53,20%) | 15,651 (61,77%) | 5,431 (30,26%) | ||
Croats | 1,457 (3,652%) | 2,894 (6,989%) | 2,157 (6,861%) | 2,663 (10,51%) | 2,472 (13,77%) | ||
Others | 996 (2,497%) | 2,054 (4,961%) | 468 (1,489%) | 327 (1,291%) | 78 (0,435%) | ||
Roma | 333 (0,835%) | 5 (0,016%) | 6 (0,024%) | 4 (0,022%) | |||
Albanians | 77 (0,193%) | 86 (0,274%) | 115 (0,454%) | 65 (0,362%) | |||
Yugoslavs | 60 (0,150%) | 5,211 (12,59%) | 6,351 (20,20%) | 952 (3,757%) | 4,250 (23,68%) | ||
Montenegrins | 31 (0,078%) | 65 (0,207%) | 82 (0,324%) | 278 (1,549%) | |||
Macedonians | 24 (0,060%) | 16 (0,051%) | 19 (0,075%) | 35 (0,195%) | |||
Slovenes | 4 (0,010%) | 19 (0,060%) | 25 (0,099%) | 55 (0,306%) | |||
Turks | 2 (0,005%) | ||||||
Hungarians | 13 (0,041%) | 16 (0,063%) | 21 (0,117%) |
Ethnic composition – Brčko district | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013. | 1991. | 1981. | 1971. | 1961. | |||
Total | 83,516 (100,0%) | 87,627 (100,0%) | 82,768 (100,0%) | 74,771 (100,0%) | 62,952 (100,0%) | ||
Bosniaks | 35,381 (42,36%) | 38,617 (44,07%) | 32,434 (39,19%) | 30,181 (40,36%) | 16,484 (26,19%) | ||
Serbs | 28,884 (34,58%) | 18,128 (20,69%) | 16,707 (20,19%) | 17,709 (23,68%) | 17,897 (28,43%) | ||
Croats | 17,252 (20,66%) | 22,252 (25,39%) | 23,975 (28,97%) | 24,925 (33,34%) | 21,994 (34,94%) | ||
Others | 1,268 (1,518%) | 2,899 (3,308%) | 1,033 (1,248%) | 553 (0,740%) | 117 (0,186%) | ||
Roma | 490 (0,587%) | 6 (0,007%) | 7 (0,009%) | 4 (0,006%) | |||
Albanians | 105 (0,126%) | 116 (0,140%) | 122 (0,163%) | 83 (0,132%) | |||
Yugoslavs | 67 (0,080%) | 5,731 (6,540%) | 8,342 (10,08%) | 1,086 (1,452%) | 5,904 (9,379%) | ||
Montenegrins | 31 (0,037%) | 87 (0,105%) | 112 (0,150%) | 326 (0,518%) | |||
Macedonians | 25 (0,030%) | 29 (0,035%) | 27 (0,036%) | 45 (0,071%) | |||
Slovenes | 9 (0,011%) | 23 (0,028%) | 33 (0,044%) | 71 (0,113%) | |||
Turks | 3 (0,004%) | ||||||
Ukrainians | 1 (0,001%) | ||||||
Hungarians | 16 (0,019%) | 16 (0,021%) | 27 (0,043%) |
- Ethnic structure of Brčko by settlements 1961
- Ethnic structure of Brčko by settlements 1971
- Ethnic structure of Brčko by settlements 1981
- Ethnic structure of Brčko by settlements 1991
- Ethnic structure of Brčko by settlements 2013
Transport
Rail
A railway station is near the city centre on the line from Vinkovci to Tuzla. However, no passenger trains operate to Brčko anymore. The closest operating railway station is in Gunja, Croatia; just on the other side of the border.
Sport
Brčko has three football clubs (FK Jedinstvo Brčko, FK Lokomotiva Brčko and the youngest club FK Ilićka 01). They all play in the Second League of Republika Srpska.
Features
Brčko has the largest port in Bosnia, on the Sava river. Aside of that, the City of Brčko is also home to an economics school of the University of East Sarajevo and to a local theatre festival.
Gallery
- Panorama of Brčko
- Brčko at night
- Fountain - the symbol of town
Twin towns — sister cities
Brčko is twinned with:
Notable people
- Edo Maajka, rapper
- Lepa Brena, singer
- Edvin Kanka Ćudić, human rights activist
- Mladen Petrić, Croatian footballer
- Anil Dervišević, "Denver-errea" volleyball club owner, Coach of woman volleyball National team of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Vesna Pisarović, singer
- Dženana Šehanović, pianist
- Anton Maglica, Croatian footballer
- Jasmin Imamović, politician
- Nataša Vojnović, Serbian fashion model
- Mato Tadić, judge
- Brankica Mihajlović, Serbian volleyball player, World and European champion, silver medalist at the 2016 Summer Olympics
- Ines Janković, Serbian fashion designer
- Nikola Kovač, Professional Counter Strike Global Offensive player
See also
Brcanski Carsijaneri Facebook page where people from Brcko gather together and talk about past.
References
- "World Gazetteer: Bosnia and Herzegovina - largest cities (per geographical entity)". World-gazetteer.com. Archived from the original on 2006-03-16.
- Welcome to Brčko, Europe’s only free city and a law unto itself.
- Kiss Lajos: Földrajzi nevek etimológiai szótára Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest 1978 ISBN 963 05 1490 7 103. oldal Bereck-szócikk
- "Press Conference Following the Meeting of the Steering Board of the Peace implementation Council". Ohr.int. 2012-05-23. Retrieved 2013-11-23.
- "Koliko znamo o bratskim gradovima Brčkog? Prvi dio - Samsun". Portal Brčko. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
- "Koliko znamo o bratskim gradovima Brčkog? Drugi dio - St. Luis". Portal Brčko. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
- "Koliko znamo o bratskim gradovima Brčkog? Treći dio - Smederevska Palanka". Portal Brčko. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
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