Bosnian War and Destruction of the Stari most
- Written by Portal Editor
Mostar is located on the Neretva River and enchants visitors with its narrow streets that are reminiscent of an Ottoman or Turkish bazaar. If you stroll through the streets, you will not be able to avoid the most important building of the place, the bridge Stari Most.
Since its construction in 1566, the bridge has not just connected the two parts of the city across the river, but has also been an important link between the cultures living in Mostar. For a long time, Muslims and Christians, Croats and Serbs lived peacefully together in the small town, giving it its multicultural charm. The bridge has been considered the symbolic bridge between east and west for centuries. It even appears as a formative figure on Mostar's coat of arms.
The city divided by destruction of the Stari Most Bridge
When the Stari Most was destroyed in 1993, this incident drove a wedge into the city. From now on, Mostar was again separated by a river, it was no longer one. The Croatians lived increasingly in the western part of the city, the Muslims from then on lived more secluded on the eastern side of the river. What distinguished Mostar before, the daily mix of different cultures, the unification of different ethnic groups - all that was now just part of the past. When the bridge fell, part of Mostar also collapsed for a while.
The new bridge first was a wire rope suspension construction
Stari most reopened in 2010
In 2010 the bridge could finally be reopened. Since then, Mostar has finally been "one", being reunited again, there is no longer any separation between the banks, and the distance between cultures has also disappeared again. One city resident judges the “new” Stari Most as a reunion between people: This is also particularly clear from this quote here: “I was just happy, I crossed the bridge with my girlfriend at the time, and we were very happy, a connection between people after the war, and that's why I think the bridge is more important than before the war. "
Criminal court sees deliberate destruction of a cultural monument
According to the prosecution of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in the Prlic et al. the bridge was deliberately destroyed by the Croatian Defense Council.
In May 2013, the criminal court sentenced six persons responsible in the Croatian Republic of Herceg-Bosna to long prison terms for serious war crimes and crimes against humanity, but also for the destruction of the bridge:
Jadranko Prlić, Prime Minister of the Republic of Herceg-Bosna, for 25 years
Bruno Stojić, its defense minister, for 20 years
Slobodan Praljak, former general, for 20 years
Milivoj Petković, former general, for 20 years
Valentin Ćorić, commander of the Bosnian-Croatian military police, for 16
Berislav Pušić, former officer, for 10 years
Not only because of its architectural uniqueness, but also because of the great symbolic power of the bridge, the building and its historical surroundings were included in the UNESCO World Heritage List on July 15, 2005, making them the first World Heritage Site in Bosnia-Herzegovina. UNESCO recognized the bridge as a "symbol of reconciliation and international cooperation [...] and [...] a symbol for the coexistence of different religious, cultural and ethnic communities". It is also a protected cultural asset under the Hague Convention.
Please read as well:
Mostar - a city in the course of history
World famous old bridge "Stari most" crossing Neretva river