Maglaj
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| Maglaj | |||
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| Municipality of Bosnia and Herzegovina | |||
| General Information | |||
| Entity | {{{entity}}} | ||
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| Area code | +387 32 | ||
| Mayor | Mehmed Mustabašić (SDA) | ||
| Website | http://www.maglaj.net | ||
Maglaj is a town and municipality in Bosnia-Herzegovina. It is situated in the northern part of Bosnia-Herzegovina, in the Zenica-Doboj canton. The city lies 25 km south of the city of Doboj, the regional trade, education, culture, entertainment, and business centre. The municipality of Maglaj is one of 12 municiplaties in the Zenica-Doboj canton. The city has a population of 25 000. The whole municipality has a population of 43 000.
The city of Maglaj never fell under Bosnian Serb control during the Bosnian War because it had a majority Muslim ethnicity. Most cities in Bosnia that had Muslim majorities never fell to the two other conflicting sides.
The town is situated in the northern part of Bosnia and Herzegovina and is situated in territory where bosniaks, or Muslims, presently form a large majority. The old Maglaj, like numerous other cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina, has an old town with mosques, traditional houses dating back from the Ottoman Empire, and a fortress that stands as a symbol of Maglaj. The new part of Magalj, situated on the West side of the river Bosna, is made up of modern architecture that was started in the 1950s, and became massively developed until 1991.
The River Bosna flows trough Maglaj on its way north to the Sava river on the border between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia. Before the civil war, the Bosna river was heavily poluted due to heavy industrial activity at the nearby Natron paper and pulp factory, as well as steel and wood industry factories in the southern cities of Zenica and Zavidovići respectively. Nowadays, the river has become cleaner due to decreased industrial activity at those plants and higher environmental standards, but ultimately will become exposed to environmental hazard yet again as these heavy industry factories reach their maximum capacity yet again.
The city, as well as the entire Maglaj municipality, have been subject to a large demographic population shift. Close to all of its pre-war Christian inhabitants, i.e. Bosnian Serbs and Bosnian Croats, who made up the majority of the pre-war municipality population, no longer reside in the Maglaj municipality. The Serbian population has largely settled in the Doboj and Modriča regions of the Republika Srpska, while the Catholic Croatian population has settled in the nearby municipality of Žepče, an enclave inhabited largely by Croats. A significant number of former Croat inhabitants have also settled in Croatia's capital Zagreb. Due to severe fighting around Maglaj throughout the Bosnian Civil War, and the catasrophic conditions it was exposed to, numerous Muslims have departed the region as well.
Pre-war Maglaj was unique because over one third of its married couples were made up of mixed ethnic groups. As a result of this, a great number of these Maglaj inhabitants felt welcome by none of the three warring ethnic groups, and tried to settle abroad. Consequentially, former Maglaj residents have dispersed throughout the world, including Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the Scandinavian countries, Italy, the Czech Republic, Canada, the United States, and Australia among others. All former residents of Maglaj are likely never to return as they have adapted to their new surroundings, and those settled in the West enjoy remarkably high standards of living.
| Municipalities of the Zenica-Doboj Canton | ||
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| Breza | Doboj Jug | Kakanj | Maglaj | Olovo | Tešanj | Usora | Vareš | Visoko | Zavidovići | Zenica | Žepče | | ||