ID | 095996 |
Title Proper | Back to the brink in Bosnia? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Chivvis, Christopher S |
Publication | 2010. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Today in Sarajevo there is disturbing talk of an unravelling of the Dayton Accords that ended the bloody civil war there 14 years ago. Nearly 100,000 people were killed in that war, which pitted Muslims against Serbs against Croats, and saw Europe's nastiest massacres since the Second World War. Since 1995, Bosnia has been at peace, but the main political parties continue to fight over the basic issues that started the war almost two decades ago. Concern over the general political situation has increased as nationalist rhetoric has raised the spectre of a re-division of the country and an ensuing descent into violence. Some in Sarajevo even evoke the possibility of 'European Gazas' emerging in some parts of the county, where there are hints that unemployed Muslim youth may be coming under the influence of a radical, foreign brand of Wahhabist Islam. |
`In' analytical Note | Survival : the IISS Quarterly Vol. 52, No. 1; Feb-Mar 2010: p.97-110 |
Journal Source | Survival : the IISS Quarterly Vol. 52, No. 1; Feb-Mar 2010: p.97-110 |
Key Words | Bosnia ; Sarajevo ; Second World War ; European Gazas ; Muslims ; Unemployed Muslim ; European Union ; United States |