Being a factory town best known for its steel mill and polluted air, Zenica is probably not the first place you would want to visit in Bosnia and Herzegovina. But the socialist face of Zenica and the nature that surrounds it is becoming more and more interesting for tourists, thanks to one young enthusiastic tour guide
Ćerimagić: Regional cooperation to be linked to EU membership
BiH: civic mobilisation against mineral exploration
Trieste, last stop: becoming adults along the Balkan route
Bosnia and Herzegovina and the EU, Dodik is working against the integration process
The Žitna lađa, traditions along the Kupa
BiH: Republika Srpska reintroduces the crime of defamation
Afan, between asphalt and grass
Being a factory town best known for its steel mill and polluted air, Zenica is probably not the first place you would want to visit in Bosnia and Herzegovina. But the socialist face of Zenica and the nature that surrounds it is becoming more and more interesting for tourists, thanks to one young enthusiastic tour guide
The 1425 days of Sarajevo
The General Framework Agreement for Peace in Bosnia and Herzegovina, signed at the military base in Dayton, Ohio, on 21 November and then formalised in Paris on 14 December 1995, decreed the end of the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The capital, Sarajevo, was held under siege for 1452 days, from 6 April 1992 to 29 February 1996. The story of those years in photographs, courtesy of photographer and journalist Mario Boccia to OBCT