FEDERATION OF BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA




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|+ style="margin-left: inherit; font-size: 135%; padding-bottom: 0.5em; line-height: 1.1em;" | 'Federacija Bosne i Hercegovine'
'Федерација Босне и Херцеговине'
'Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina'
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|-
| colspan=2 align=center | The location of the FBiH entity as part of the state of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Europe.
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| colspan="2" style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9;" align=center |
The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Bosnia and Herzegovina

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| colspan=2 align=center | The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (blue) within Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Brčko District (green) belongs to both entities.
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| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top" | 'Capital'
| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top" | Sarajevo
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| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;" | 'Official languages'
| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top" | Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian
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| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;" | 'Area'
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|  - Total|| 26,110 km² 
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| style="padding: 0 1em 0.4em 0; text-align:left;" |  - Water (%) || n/a
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| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;" | 'Population'
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| style="padding: 0 1em 0 0; text-align:left;" | - (est.) || 3,045,000
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| style="padding: 0 1em 0.4em 0; text-align:left; vertical-align: top;" |  - Density (est.)
| style="padding: 0 1em 0.4em 0; text-align:left; vertical-align: top;" | 116,6/km
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|  - Ethnic groups
  (2002 est.)
| Bosniaks: 70%
Croats: 28%
Serbs: 1.4%
Others: 0,6%
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| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;" | 'Currency'
| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top;" | Convertible mark {KM}
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| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top; text-align: left;" | 'Time zone'
| style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9; padding: 0.4em 1em 0.4em 0; vertical-align: top" | CET (UTC +1)
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| style="padding: 0 1em 0.2em 0; text-align:left; vertical-align: top" - Summer (DST)
| style="padding: 0 1em 0.2em 0; text-align:left; vertical-align: top" CEST (UTC +2)
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| colspan="2" style="border-top: solid 1px #ccd2d9;" align=left | 'Notes'
1 & 2The flag and the coat of arms of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina have been deemed unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court of Bosnia and Herzegovina and were due to be replaced by September 2006.[1]
Although the Brčko District is formally held in condominium by both entities simultaneously (the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Republika Srpska), it is a ''de facto'' third entity, as it has all the same powers as the other two entities and is under the direct sovereignty of BiH. [2]


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:''This article refers to the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, one of the two political entities of the State of Bosnia and Herzegovina under Dayton Peace Agreement and the Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina; it should not be confused with the State of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which also includes Republika Srpska and Brčko District.''
The 'Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina' (''Federacija Bosne i Hercegovine,'' Федерација Босне и Херцеговине, ) is one of the two political entities that compose the country of Bosnia and Herzegovina (the other entity is the Republika Srpska). The two entities are delineated by the Inter-Entity Boundary Line.
The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina is primarily inhabited by Bosniaks, Bosnian Serbs and Croats, which is why it is informally referred to as the ''Bosniak-Croat Federation''. However, by decision of the Constitutional court in 2001, the Serbs were declared the third constituent ethnic group of the Federation. The same happened to Bosniaks and Croats in the Republika Srpska.
The Federation was created by the Washington accords signed on March 18, 1994, which established a ''Constituent assembly'' (''Ustavotvorna skupština/Ustavotvorbeni Sabor''). The ''Constituent assembly'' continued its work until October 1996.
The Federation now has its own capital, government, flag and coat of arms, president, parliament, customs and police departments, postal system (in fact, two of them), and airline (BH Airlines). It has its own army, the ''Vojska Federacije Bosne i Hercegovine'', though it is under the control of the state-level Bosnia-Herzegovina Ministry of Defense, as is the ''Vojska Republike Srpske''. Entity armies (including Vojska Republike Srpske) should have been united by the end of the 2005 and entity-level Ministry of Defense and their armies should have been abolished by January 1, 2006. It now seems that a unified army will be created by the end of 2007,[1] although some units have already been merged.[2]

Contents
History
Administrative divisions
Cities
Demographics
1991
1996
Institutions
Gallery
References
See also
External links

History


Map of the front lines in BIH in early 1995, showing territory held by Bosnian government and Bosnian Croat forces of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and 'Narodna Odbrana / Peoples' defense' forces of 'Autonomous Province of Western Bosnia'.

The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina was formed by the Washington Agreement of May 1994. Under the agreement, the combined territory held by the Croat and Armija RBiH forces was divided into ten autonomous cantons. The cantonal system was selected to prevent dominance by one ethnic group over another.
In 1995, Bosnian government forces and Bosnian Croat forces of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina defeated forces of the 'Autonomous Province of Western Bosnia', thus this area was also included in Federation.
By the Dayton Agreement of 1995, the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina was defined as one of the two entities of Bosnia and Herzegovina and included 51% of the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina (another entity, Republika Srpska included 49%).
On March 8, 2000, the Brčko District was formed as an autonomous entity within Bosnia and Herzegovina and it was created from part of the territory of both Bosnian entities. Brčko District is now a shared territory that belong to both entities.

Administrative divisions


Cantons of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina is divided into ten cantons (''kanton'' or ''županija''):
#Una-Sana, ''Unsko-Sanski Kanton''
#Posavina, ''Posavski Kanton''
#Tuzla, ''Tuzlanski Kanton''
#Zenica-Doboj, ''Zeničko-Dobojski Kanton''
#Bosnian Podrinje, ''Bosanskopodrinjski Kanton''
#Central Bosnia, ''Srednjebosanski Kanton''
#Herzegovina-Neretva, ''Hercegovačko-neretvanski Kanton''
#West Herzegovina, ''Zapadnohercegovački kanton''
#Sarajevo, ''Kanton Sarajevo''
#Canton 10, ''Kanton 10''.[3]
Five of the cantons (Una-Sana, Tuzla, Zenica-Doboj, Bosnian Podrinje and Sarajevo) are Bosniak majority cantons, three (Posavina, West Herzegovina and Canton 10) are Croat majority cantons, and two (Central Bosnia and Herzegovina-Neretva) are 'ethnically mixed', meaning there are special legislative procedures for ''protection'' of the constituent ethnic groups.
A significant portion of Brčko District was also part of the Federation; however, when the district was created, it became shared territory of both entities, but it was not placed under control of either of the two, and is hence under direct jurisdiction of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Currently the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina has 79 municipalities.

Cities


Largest cities in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

List of the largest cities in Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina:

Sarajevo

Zenica

Tuzla

Mostar

Bihać

Bugojno

Brčko

Travnik

Cazin

Velika Kladuša

Visoko

Goražde

Konjic

Gračanica

Gradačac

Bosanska Krupa

Zavidovići

Živinice

Sanski Most

Lukavac

Kakanj

Livno

Odžak
Note: the town of Brčko is part of the Brčko District, which is part of both, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republika Srpska.

Demographics


Ethnic map of BIH, 2005.

The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina comprises 51% of the land area of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and is home to around 60% of the country's total population. All data dealing with population, including ethnic distributions, are subject to considerable error because of the lack of official census figures.
1991

In 1991, the population of the territory of present-day Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina numbered 2,757,888 inhabitants, including: [3]

Muslims = 1,436,498 (52.1%)

Croats = 610,458 (22.1%)

Serbs = 485,933 (17.6%)

★ others = 224,999 (8.2%)
1996

In 1996, the population of Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina numbered 2,444,665 inhabitants, including: [4]

Bosniaks = 1,773,566 (72.5%)

Croats = 556,289 (22.8%)

Serbs = 56,618 (2.3%)

★ others = 58,192 (2.4%)

Institutions


There is a President of the Federation, and two Vice-presidents thereof, just like in Republika Srpska.
From 2003 until 2007 the president was Croat, Niko Lozančić of the HDZ party, whereas both the Bosniak (Sahbaz Džihanović) and Serb (Desnica Radivojević) Vice-presidents came from the SDA party.
The current President is Croat, Borjana Krišto (HDZ), the Bosniak Vice-President is Mirsad Kebo (SDA) and the Serb Vice-President is Spomenka Mičić (SBiH).
The Cabinet has 16 members with carefully delineated nationality quotas. There are 8 Bosniak, 5 Croat and 3 Serb ministers in the current Government.
The Prime minister from 2003 until 2007 was a Bosniak, Ahmet Hadžipašić of the SDA. As of March, 2007, the prime minister is Nedžad Branković, also Bosniak of the SDA.
The Parliament consists of two houses, the ''House of Representatives'' and the ''House of Peoples''. The House of Representatives is an elected body of 98 MPs, whereas the House of Peoples consists of Representatives delegated by the cantonal parliaments.
Interestingly, a number of institutions in the Federation still function under the 'componental' system; there is a Croat postal system and a Bosniak postal system, a Croat telecom and a Bosniak telecom, a Croat army ''component'' and a Bosniak army ''component''; however, recently many systems have been merged into one single public company, e.g. the pension system or the public broadcasting company of the Federation. Each of the cantons also has broad-ranging authorities, such as having its own courts and police forces.
Federation currently has its own entity police force. Police systems including entity ministries of security of both entities are to be united by 2010 into a new state-level Ministry of Security and entity level police forces are to abolished and replaced with state level police force under regional control.
Armies of both entities are under the control of a new state-level Ministry of Defence as of January 1, 2006.

Gallery



References


1. Amra Hadziosmanovic Bosnia to get single army by 2007, DefenceNews.com, 6 July 2006, accessed 13 September 2006
2. Nedim Dervisbegovic Bosnia's first unified army platoon deployed to Iraq, ''The San Diego Union-Tribune'', 2 June 2005, accessed 13 September 2006
3. Structure of Federation of Bosnia and Hezegovina:

English

Bosnian

Croatian

See also



Republika Srpska

Political divisions of Bosnia and Herzegovina

PBSBiH

Federation Television (FTV)

Croatian Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia

Western Bosnia

External links



Website of the Federal Government

Parliament of the Federation



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