THE ARCHIVE
Letter from...
Bosnia | Bosnia |
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Next season Bosnian football will be united for the first time since the war. After the Dayton peace agreement was signed in November 1995, Bosnia became the only country in the world with three different football leagues. The Premier League, organised by the Bosnian Football Federation (BFF), was recognised by UEFA and FIFA, while the Croat-controlled part of the country maintained its own tournament, as did the “ethnically cleansed” Bosnian Serb enclave, Republika Srpska. In 1998, under pressure from UEFA, Croat politicians allowed their clubs to join the official league. The Serbs, however, still refused to play, arguing that the situation in Bosnia was similar to Britain with its four separate leagues and insisting, in vain, on having their own representation at international level and in the European club competitions. Finally, in April, after four years of negotiations, BFF and Republika Srpska football executives finally signed a reunification agreement at UEFA headquarters in Zurich. Before the war, several Bosnian clubs played in the Yugoslav first division, which had been won by both the main clubs in Sarajevo. Zeljeznicar, founded by railway workers in 1921, are seen as the working-class club, while FK Sarajevo have traditionally been followed by the shopkeepers and cafe owners who live in the old inner city. The best year for both was 1985, when Zeljeznicar came within five minutes of meeting Real Madrid in the UEFA Cup final, only to lose to a late away goal in their semi-final against Videoton of Hungary, while FK Sarajevo took the second of their two national titles. From WSC 184 June 2002. What was happening this month On the subject...
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