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Croatia

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Property Agents In Croatia

Real estate, Travel agency Sizgoriceva, Split Not Readyenglish, Nice map, that's all
Broker Real Estate,(Croatian, English, Italian, German) ResidentialCommercialRentalLandExcellent
Broker Co CommercialResort/VacationRentalAverageenglish, Good links to area info
Agencija NEBODER, Real Estate Agency, Slavonski Brod, CroatiaResidentialCommercialResort/VacationLandVery Good
Croatia-ecological oasis of EuropeResidentialCommercialVery Good
Welcome to IstraInt'l Relo InfoExcellentPrimeenglish/deutsch/Italiano/Hrvatski, This site contains absolutely everything you'd want to know about the entire Croatian Holiday Resort Area, including exchanges rates, where to stay/eat, where/how to get health care and what to do in case of an auto accident.
Histria Biro, Porec ResidentialNot ReadyCroatian/english
Lacop Servis ResidentialCommercialNot Readyenglish/deutsch/Italiano/Hrvatsk
PIU & M, LabinEnglish/deutsch/Français/Italiano/Hrvatski/Czech/Hungarian
Country Club, RovinjEnglish/Deutsch/Italiano/Hrvatsk
Croatian Real Estate Exchange SearchableResidentialCommercialResort/VacationEnglish
Sigma Nekretnine, Zagreb ResidentialCommercialoResidentialNat'l ResourcesInt'l Relo InfoAverageenglish/Hrvatsk
Nenkretnine, Neno Vulic, DalmatiaResidentialCommercialRentalResort/VacationExcellent
maybe prime Non-Stop Property Advertisement Service DirectoryHrvatski/english
Passage d.o.o., CroatiaResidentialVery Good
Split Nekretnine, CroatiaResidentialCommercialVery Good

Croatia

(Serbo-Croatian Hrvatska)

Country in central Europe, bounded N by Slovenia and Hungary, W by the Adriatic Sea, and E by Bosnia- Herzegovina and the Yugoslavian republic of Serbia.

Government

Under the 1990 constitution, there is a bicameral legislature, the Sabor, consisting of an 80-member chamber of deputies (lower house) and a 63- seat chamber of districts (upper house). Deputies to the lower house, which is the most influential of the two, are popularly elected for a four- year term; three upper-house representatives are elected for each of the republic's 21 counties. The president, who serves as head of state and supreme commander of the armed forces, is popularly elected for a five-year term, with the power to appoint the prime minister (who must be able to command a majority in the lower house) and other members of government. The president also has the power to call referenda, call elections, and at times of crisis, has decree powers. A proportional- representation electoral system was adopted in the republic 1993.

History

Part of Pannonia in Roman times, the region was settled by Carpathian Croats in the 7th century. Roman Catholicism was adopted 1054. For most of the 800 years from 1102 Croatia was an autonomous kingdom under the Hungarian crown, but often a battleground between Hungary, Byzantium, and Venice. After 1524, most of the country came under the rule of the Ottoman Empire, returning to the Hungarian crown only after the Peace of Karlovitz 1699.

Croatia was briefly an Austrian crownland 1849 and again a Hungarian crownland 1868. It was included in the kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes formed 1918 (called Yugoslavia from 1929). During World War II a Nazi puppet state, `Greater Croatia´, was established April 1941 under Ante Pavelic (1889-1959). As many as 100,000 Serbs and 55,000 Jews were massacred by this Croatian regime, which sought to establish a ` pure´ Croatian Catholic republic. In Nov 1945 it became a constituent republic within the Yugoslav Socialist Federal Republic, whose dominant figure was Marshal Tito.

Serb-Croat separatism

From the 1970s, resentful of perceived Serb dominance of the Yugoslav Federation, a violent separatist movement began to gain ground. Nationalist agitation continued through the 1980s and there was mounting industrial unrest from 1987 as spiralling inflation caused a sharp fall in living standards. In an effort to court popularity and concerned at the Serb chauvinism of Slobodan Milosevic, the Croatia League of Socialists (communists), later renamed the Party of Democratic Renewal (PDR), adopted an increasingly anti-Serb line from the mid-1980s. Following Slovenia's lead, it allowed the formation of rival political parties from 1989. In the multiparty republic elections of April-May 1990, the PDR was comprehensively defeated by the right-wing nationalist Croatian Democratic Union (CDU). Led by Franjo Tudjman, who had been imprisoned in 1972 for his nationalist activities, the CDU secured almost a two-thirds assembly majority. Tudjman became president.

Secession from Yugoslavia

In Feb 1991 the Croatian assembly, along with that of neighbouring Catholic Slovenia, issued a proclamation calling for secession from Yugoslavia and the establishment of a new confederation that excluded Serbia and Montenegro. It also ordered the creation of an independent Croatian army. Concerned at possible maltreatment in a future independent Croatia, Serb militants announced March 1991 the secession from Croatia of the self-proclaimed ` Serbian Autonomous Region of Krajina´, containing 250,000 Serbs. In a May 1991 referendum there was 90% support in Krajina for its remaining with Serbia and Montenegro within a residual Yugoslavia. A week later, Croatia's electors voted overwhelmingly (93%) for independence within a loose confederation of Yugoslav sovereign states. On 26 June 1991 the Croatian government, in concert with Slovenia, issued a unilateral declaration of independence.

Civil war

From July 1991 there was escalating conflict with the Serb-dominated Yugoslav army and civil war within Croatia.

Independent Serbian `governments´ were proclaimed in Krajina and in eastern and western Slavonia. A succession of cease-fires ordered by the Yugoslav federal presidency and the European Community passed unobserved and by Sept 1991 at least a third of Croatia had fallen under Serb control, with intense fighting taking place around the towns of Osijek and Vukovar. Croatia's ports were besieged and at least 500,000 people were made refugees. Rich in oil, Croatia retaliated with an oil-supply blockade on Serbia and announced, in Oct 1991, that it had formally severed all official relations with Yugoslavia.

Cease-fire agreed

In Jan 1992 a peace plan was successfully brokered in Sarajevo by United Nations (UN) envoy Cyrus Vance. The agreement provided for an immediate cease-fire, the full withdrawal of the Yugoslav army from Croatia, and the deployment of 10,000 UN troops in contested Krajina and E and W Slavonia until a political settlement was worked out. This accord was disregarded by the breakaway Serb leader in Krajina, Milan Babic, but recognized by the main Croatian and Serbian forces. Under German pressure, Croatia's and Slovenia's independence was recognized by the EC and the USA early 1992, and in May by the UN.

UN peacekeeping force established

During March and April 1992 14,000 UN peacekeeping forces were drafted into Croatia and gradually took control of Krajina, although Croatian forces continued to shell Krajina's capital, Knin. Tudjman was directly elected president in Aug, and the CDU won an overwhelming victory in concurrent assembly elections.

Serb-held areas retaken

In Jan 1993 Croatia launched a surprise offensive into Serb-held Krajina, violating the 1992 UN peace agreement. A new government was sworn in April 1993, and in 1994 an accord was signed with Bosnia-Herzegovina's Muslim and ethnic-Croat leaders creating a Muslim-Croat federation, eventually to be linked to Croatia in a loose confederation. After reluctantly renewing the mandate of a much- reduced UN peacekeeping force March 1995, Tudjman launched a further offensive into Krajina and W Slavonia, to which the Croatian Serbs responded by shelling the capital, Zagreb. In a lightning assault in Aug both Krajina and W Slavonia were overrun. Human rights abuses were reported during the attack and more than 150,000 Croatian Serbs fled to Serbia and Serb-held areas in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Tudjman extended the offensive into Bosnia- Herzegovina, repelling a Bosnian- Serb assault on the UN `safe area´ of Bihac. By Sept, only the narrow belt of E Slavonia remained in the hands of the Croatian Serbs. An early election was called Oct 1995, but although the CDU won most seats, it failed to win an absolute majority. The following month the Croatian Serbs agreed to hand back E Slavonia to Croatia over a two-year period. In Jan 1996 the UN Security Council condemned Croatia for human-rights offences against Serbs in Krajina.

Diplomatic relations were restored between Croatia and Yugoslavia Aug 1996, and in Oct 1996 Croatia entered the Council of Europe. Opposition parties polled strongly in local elections April 1997.

 
     
 


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