Sjeverin

Coordinates: 43°36′N 19°22′E / 43.600°N 19.367°E / 43.600; 19.367
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Sjeverin
Сјеверин
Village
UTC+2 (CEST
)

Sjeverin (

Bosnia. In 2002 it had a population of 337, the majority Serbs.[1]

In October 1992, during the Bosnian war, 16 Bosniak residents of Sjeverin were abducted and murdered by Milan Lukić and members of Osvetnici ("Avengers") paramilitary group in the Sjeverin massacre. Following the massacre, other Bosniaks fled the area. In 2006 the Sandžak Committee for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms reported that the state was not working to facilitate the return of the population displaced by ethnic cleansing.[2]

Population: 1948: 240 / 1953: 253 / 1961: 304 / 1971: 360 / 1981: 424 / 1991: 572 / 2002: 337[1]

Ethnic composition of the population (1981): Serbs: 169 (39,86%); Muslims: 231 (54,48%); Yugoslavs: 22 (5.19%); Unknown/Other:

Ethnic composition of the population (2002): Serbs: 244 (72.40%); Bosniaks: 63 (18.69%); Muslims: 25 (7.41%); Montenegrins: 1 (0.29%); Unknown/Other:[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c fr:Sjeverin
  2. ^ "An Outline of the Status of Human Rights and Freedoms in Sandzak 1991–2006". Sandžak Committee for Protection of Human Rights and Freedoms. Retrieved 7 February 2010.

43°36′N 19°22′E / 43.600°N 19.367°E / 43.600; 19.367