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Korenica is a village in Lika, Croatia, located in the municipality of Plitvička Jezera, on the D1 road between Plitvice and Udbina. According to 2011 census it has 1,766 residents. [3] It is the seat of the Plitvička Jezera Municipality. In SFR Yugoslavia it was named Titova Korenica after Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito.
Meriton Korenica (born 15 November 1996) is a Kosovan professional footballer who plays as a winger for Liga I club CFR Cluj and the Kosovo national team. Club career [ edit ]
After the breakup of Yugoslavia, Homoljac was in the Republic of Serbian Krajina. Until the territorial reorganization in Croatia, the settlement was part of the former municipality of Korenica. Until the territorial reorganization in Croatia, the settlement was part of the former municipality of Korenica.
The national park is located at the national route D1 Zagreb–Split between Slunj and Korenica in the vicinity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Other larger municipalities within the surrounding area are Ogulin, Rakovica, Otočac, Gospić and Bihać in Bosnia.
As the fighting around Plitvice ended, sporadic gunfire was reported near Titova Korenica, to the south. [16] The same afternoon, a Croatian police station was established at the Plitvice Lakes and Tomislav Iljić was appointed its commanding officer. [8] The station was staffed by approximately 90 police officers who were redeployed from ...
Korenica was born to a Kosovo Albanian family in Prizren, in what was then the Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo in the Socialist Republic of Serbia, Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He holds a master's degree in international business and is a manager in logistics. [1]
Further escalation of the fighting was seen at the Ljubovo pass on the Gospić–Korenica road, where the JNA and SAO Krajina troops fought and pushed the ZNG back on 28–29 July. [ 14 ] Ethnic violence continued to escalate when Serb paramilitaries abducted and killed five Croatian civilians from Lovinac in southern Lika on 5 August, [ 15 ...
According to the legally binding verdict of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, the Federal Army and Serbian police systematically attacked Albanian-populated villages after the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia that began on 24 March 1999; abused, robbed and killed civilians, ordering them to go to Albania or Montenegro ...