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Novi Grad (Serbian Cyrillic: Нови Град, pronounced [nôʋiː grâːd]; lit. "New Town") is a municipality of the city of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is the westernmost of the four municipalities that make up the city of Sarajevo. The municipality also consists of the villages Bojnik and Rečica.
Sniper Alley in 1996, seen from a IFOR vehicle. Hand-painted warning sign: "Watch out – Sniper" "Sniper Alley" (Bosnian: Snajperska aleja / Снајперска алеја) was the informal name primarily for streets such as Ulica Zmaja od Bosne (Dragon of Bosnia Street) and Meša Selimović Boulevard, the main boulevard in Sarajevo which during the Bosnian War was lined with Serbian snipers ...
Entered into the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival, Santa Barbara International Film Festival, Hollywood Film Festival; Golden Arena for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Tony Grga) at the 2010 Pula Film Festival: 2011: A Cell Phone Movie: Nedžad Begović: 2012: Children of Sarajevo: Marija Pikić: Ismir Gagula, Bojan Navojec: Drama: 2013 ...
Across the festival’s four competition sections for feature, documentary, short and student film, 54 films will compete for Heart of Sarajevo Awards, including 19 world, nine international ...
Otoka (Cyrillic: Отока) is a part of Novi Grad, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, located within the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It shares borders with the following neighborhoods: Čengić vila (East side), Aneks (South-East side), Švrakino Selo (South side). Its residential core represents a chain of high-rise buildings ...
It is located in the middle of the Sarajevo field, predominantly on the northern bank of the Miljacka, between Novi Grad and Centar. Prior to the siege, Novo Sarajevo had some 47.6 km 2 (41.6% Forest, 17.5% Meadows, 13.5% Commercial/Building Land, 10.4% Grass-land, 8.4% Ploghland, 13.5% Gardens).
The title refers to the neighbourhood of Sarajevo where Esma lives, which was one of the most traumatized neighbourhoods in the city. [1]According to the director, ...in 1992 everything changed and I realized that I was living in a war in which sex was used as part of a war strategy to humiliate women and thereby cause the destruction of an ethnic group. 20,000 women were systematically raped ...
Džidžikovac (Cyrillic: Џиџиковац), (from "džidži" Bosnian pronunciation for Ottoman Turkish: güzel; in Bosnian: nagizdan, nađiđan, lijep; or transl. picturesque), [1] is a neighborhood in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and since 2008 a National Monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina [2]