Jump to content

Preševo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 83.89.16.138 (talk) at 01:13, 9 August 2009 (moving section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Template:Infobox Serbia municipality

Preševo (Serbian: Прешево, pronounced [ˈpɾɛːʃɛvɔ]; Albanian: Preshevë or Presheva), also known as Presevo and Preshevo, is a town and municipality in Pčinja District of Serbia, bordering the Republic of Macedonia and Kosovo. According to 2002 census, the municipality of Preševo had a population of 34,904 people.


Demographics

Ethnic groups in the municipality

Ethnic Composition
Year Serb  % Albanian  % Total
1961 6,741 25.21% 18,229 68.18% 26,738
1971 5,777 19.22% 23,625 78.60% 30,057
1981 4,204 12.38% 28,961 85.31% 33,948
1991 3,206 8.23% 34,992 89.85% 38,943
2002 2,984 8.55% 31,098 89.10% 34,904

The population of the Preševo municipality has, at close to 90%, the highest percentage of ethnic Albanians in Serbia, excluding the disputed territory of Kosovo. Most of the remainder of its inhabitants are Serbs, who speak the Torlak dialect of the Serbian language.

Settlements by ethnic majority

Most settlements in Preševo municipality have an absolute Albanian majority. The exceptions are the villages: Ljanik, Svinjište, Slavujevac and Cakanovac, where Serbs compose an ethnic majority.

File:Presevo Presheva Serbie.jpg
Preševo

Also, most villages have a 99% Albanian population, but there are some settlements in which the Serbs of Preševo Valley live and where they form a significant minority: Buštranje, Golemi Dol, Reljan, Strezovce, Trnava, Čukarka, and the town of Preševo. Nevertheless, those villages 20–40 years ago were settlements with Serbian majority. Serbs have started to move out since that period, while Albanians were buying their households and finally settled there.

Politics

In 1992, the Albanians of the area organized a referendum in which they voted that Preševo, Medveđa and Bujanovac should join Kosovo. Between 1999 and 2001, an ethnic Albanian guerrilla organization, the "Liberation Army of Preševo, Medveđa and Bujanovac" (UCPMB), was operational in this region with a goal to secede these three municipalities from Yugoslavia and join them to a future independent Kosovo. The activities attracted less international media interest than the related events of Kosovo and the Republic of Macedonia. The uprising was quelled by Serb forces, the current situation is stable but with some tension.

Since December 2005, the previous president lost in his seat and was replaced by the Albanian Democratic party (PDSH) with leader Ragmi Mustafa. After six months, the population again voted and again Ragmi Mustafa was chosen as Municipal President of Preševo for the next four years.

Depleted uranium

A total of 161 depleted uranium bullets have been recovered in Reljan near Presevo in southern Serbia. The Serbian government has funded the cleanup operation of the Reljan site with 350,000 euros.[1]

See also

References