Žepa
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Žepa (Cyrillic: Жепа) is a village in the east of Bosnia and Herzegovina in the municipality of Rogatica. Žepa is located northeast of Rogatica itself, southwest of Srebrenica and northwest of Višegrad. It lies on a smaller river that flows into the Drina river nearby, in a valley between the mountains Javor and Devetak.
In 1991 the population of Žepa was 2,441 with 2,330 Bosniaks (95%), 103 Serbs and 8 Yugoslavs.
During the War in Bosnia (1992-1995), Žepa became one of three Bosniak enclaves in eastern Bosnia surrounded by the Bosnian Serbs, along with Srebrenica a short distance downstream and Goražde farther upstream, after other towns such as Foča, Bratunac and Zvornik were ethnically cleansed. The military commander of the Žepa enclave was Avdo Palić. In April 1993 Žepa was declared a United Nations safe area and had a small Ukrainian Army unit of UNPROFOR stationed there. In July 1995, the town was captured by the Bosnian Serb Army who expelled the population.
[edit] External links
- Zepa Online
- Samir's Zepa Online
- Ivo Andrić Foundation - The Bridge on the Žepa
- The long way back to Zepa
- Michael Sells - David Rohde's "Endgame: The Betrayal and Fall of Srebrenica"
- Topographic map