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The following map was published by National Geographic Vol. 178, No.2, August 1990 , less than a year before the civil wars broke in ex-Yugoslavia, on page 105. The front page of the August issue had title


Yugoslavia, A House Much Divided


The above map was designed by the National Geographic Society Cartographic Division.
Design: Bob Pratt
Research: Ross M. Emerson
Production: John L. Beeson, James E. McClelland, Jr.
Map Editor: Jon A. Sayre, Sr.
Consultants: George W. Hoffman, Charles Jelavich [a Croat]

(N.G.) NOTE: Colors represent areas where an ethnic nationality constitutes 50% or more of the population.


What should you note on the map:

  1. The Serbs, here presented in light green, are majority population over large portions of Bosnia (in 1990) as well as large portions of Tito designed "Croatia".
  2. Future "Bosniacs" (here simply "Muslims") - are, at last, presented at all as a separate "nationality". On the map they are presented in brown. They are majority population only in a small discontinuous portion of Bosnia, and in part of Serbia. Why was ENTIRE Bosnia-Hercegovina given to their control?
  3. The white areas, according to the map, are areas with "No predominant ethnic group". Note that those include:
    - Sarajevo
    - Mostar
    - Osijek/Vukovar
    These were exacly places of heavy battles between different ethnic groups. Also, the battles raged at the places of contact between majority area masses.
  4. Last but not least: The ethnic map of Yugoslavia was not secret. Here we see it in a public publication accessible to anyone interested. Those (thousands) of Western media people that repeated over and over that the Serbs "occupied", "conquered", "landgrabbed" portions of Croatia, Bosnia - had to know that they were involved in pure propaganda.

The above presented map was accompanied by a short history of the area. We will provide excerpts from a few (Quote:)


OUR NOTE: The country of Yugoslavia was formed in 1918. Its first name was the "Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes". Those three nations were the constituent nations of Yugoslavia. Thus, they have the right to (using peaceful means) negotiate leaving the union.

Albanians of Kosovo are NOT constituent nation of Yugoslavia. They are minority in the true sense of the term. To make a precedent and give Albanians of Kosovo "right" to secede would open a whole new Pandora's box in the international relationships.


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Last revised: May 3, 1998