
Kosovska Mitrovica.
'Kosovska Mitrovica' (
Serbian: Косовска Митровица, ''Kosovska Mitrovica'' ;
Albanian: ''Mitrovica'' or ''Mitrovicë'' ) is a city and municipality in northern
Kosovo, a
Serbian province under
UN administration. It is located at . The city was also known as ''Titova Mitrovica'' or ''Mitrovica e Titos'' after
Tito's death, when the constitutive parts of now former
Yugoslavia had to have one place name each with the word 'Tito's' or 'Tito' in it.
History
Early history
The city is one of the oldest known settlements in Kosovo, being first mentioned in written documents during the
Middle Ages. The name ''Mitrovica'' comes from the
14th century, from
Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki, but there are some other legends on the origin of its name. Nearby Mitrovica is the medieval fortress of
Zvečan, which played an important role during the
Kingdom of Serbia under
Nemanjić rule.
Under
Ottoman rule Mitrovica was a typical small Oriental city. Rapid development came in the 19th century after
lead ore was discovered and mined in the region, providing what has historically been one of Kosovo's largest industries.
Mitrovica during and after the Kosovo War
Both the town and municipality were badly affected by the 1999
Kosovo War. According to the
OSCE, the area had been the scene of guerrilla activity by the
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) prior to the war. It came under the command of
NATO's French sector; 7,000 French troops are stationed in the western sector with their headquarters in Kosovska Mitrovica. They were reinforced with a contingent of 1,200 troops from the United Arab Emirates, and a small number of Danish troops.
In the aftermath of the war, the town became a symbol of Kosovo's ethnic divisions. The badly damaged southern half of the town was repopulated by an estimated 50,000 Albanians. Their numbers have since grown with the arrival of refugees from destroyed villages in the countryside. Most of the approximately 6,000 Roma fled to Serbia. In the north, some 8-10,000 Kosovo Serbs remained in their homes, with 2,000 Kosovo Albanians and 1,700 Muslim Slavs living in discrete enclaves on the north bank of the
Ibar river. Almost all of the Serbs living on the south bank were displaced to the north. In
2003 the city had an estimated total population of 75,600 and the municipality's population is estimated to be some 105,000.
Mitrovica became the focus for ethnic clashes between the two communities, exacerbated by the presence of nationalist extremists on both sides. The bridges linking the two sides of the town were guarded by armed groups determined to prevent incursions by the other side. Because of the tense situation in the town,
KFOR troops and the
UNMIK police were stationed there in large numbers to head off trouble. However, violence and harassment was often directed against members of the "wrong" ethnic community on both sides of the river, necessitating the presence of troops and police checkpoints around individual areas of the city and even in front of individual buildings.
On
March 17,
2004, the drowning of one Albanian child in the river prompted major ethnic violence in the town and a Serbian teenager was killed. Demonstrations by thousands of angry Albanians and Serbs mobilised to stop them crossing the river degenerated into rioting and gunfire, leaving at eight Albanians dead and at least 300 injured. The bloodshed sparked off the worst
unrest in Kosovo seen since the end of the 1999 war.
The local prison was the scene of an international incident on
April 18,
2004 when
Ahmad Mustafa Ibrahim, a Jordanian policeman working as a UN prison guard, opened fire on a group of UN police officers leaving a class, killing three.
[2]
Demographics
Before the 1999 Kosovo War, Mitrovica municipality had a population estimated by the
OSCE to comprise some 116,500 people, 81% of them Kosovo Albanian, 10%
Serb and the remainder other nationalities (notably
Roma). Most of the non-Albanians lived in the town of Mitrovica, which had a population of 68,000 – 71% Kosovo Albanian, with approximately 9,000 Serbs and 10,141 other nationalities. Kosovo Albanians lived throughout the city, but most Serbs lived in the north side, divided from the predominantly Albanian south side by the
Ibar River.
| 'Ethnic Composition, Including IDPs' |
| Year/Population | Albanians | % | Serbs | % | Bosniaks | % | Roma/Ashkali | % | Turks | % | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | 82,837 | 78 | 10,698 | 10.2 | 5,205 | 4.96 | 4,851 | 4.63 | 431 | 0.41 | | ||
| 1998 | 95,231 | 81.74 | 10,447 | 8.96 | | | | | | | | ||
| Current figure | N/A | | N/A | | 2,000 | 1.76 | 545 | 0.48 | 600 | 0.53 | | ||
Source: 1991 census: FRY Institute of Statistics and UNHCR statistics of 1998/OSCE estimates. It is noted that the 1991 census was highly politicised and is thus unreliable. Ref: OSCE ' | |||||||||||||
Culture and Education
Serbian faculties of the
University of Priština were relocated to Mitrovica from
Priština in 1999.
See also
★
Kosovo Serb enclaves
★
Roma in Mitrovica Camps
★
New bridge in Kosovska Mitrovica
Famous Faces
'Miljana Musovic' - Basketball player of Barcelona and Serbia team U20
href="http://interwap.hit.bg/mil.jpg
href="http://interwap.hit.bg/mil1.jpg
References
External links
★
Municipality of Mitrovica The official website of Municipality of South Mitrovica, in
Albanian,
English, and
Serbian.
★
Kosovska Mitrovica Live
★
OSCE:Profile of Mitrovicë / Mitrovica
★
HCIC, Mitrovica Situation - HCIC, UNHCR, WEU, KFOR (22 Mar 2000)
★
Mitrovica Situation - HCIC, UNHCR, WEU, KFOR (24 Feb 2000)
★
SOK Kosovo and its population
★
Mitrovica: North and South Video about displacement and reconstruction in Mitrovica.
★
Burning of St. Sava church in south Mitrovica 17 March