- published: 15 Feb 2016
- views: 15097
Mitrovica, which stems from the name "Saint Demetrius" or "Sveti Dimitrije" (Cyrillic: "Свети Димитрије") may refer to:
Mitrovica (Albanian: Mitrovicë; Serbian: Kosovska Mitrovica / Косовска Митровица; Turkish: Mitroviça) is a city and municipality in Northern Kosovo. It is the administrative center of the District of Mitrovica. According to the 2011 Census, the total population is 71,601. However, the city was divided in 2013 and therefore the number is now far lower. Albanians make the majority of the municipality (96.6%), followed by smaller ethnic groups like Bosniaks, Turks, Roma, Ashkali and Balkan Egyptians, and others.
The town is divided by the Ibar river, with the northern Serb-majority part of the city becoming a new municipality known as North Mitrovica. The Serbian part became a separate municipality in 2013, following the North Kosovo crisis.
In the middles ages the city was called "Demetrius" in honour of Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki. When the city came under Ottoman rule, it was renamed "Mitrovica", as happened to other locations in the Balkans named after Saint Demetrius.
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Natural Sound Hundreds of ethnic Albanian and Serbian rioters showered French and Italian peacekeepers with stones and bottles on Friday in a second day of clashes at a bridge dividing the northwestern city of Mitrovica into Serb and Albanian enclaves. French troops responded with tear gas and percussion grenades to try to disperse the crowd, which hurled stones and bottles repeatedly for nearly two hours until the Albanian protestors dispersed. Several people were injured but there was no official casualty count. Italian riot police eventually managed to separate the crowd from the French soldiers positioned on the bridge, which was covered with broken glass and other debris. The violence erupted one day after a melee Thursday between hundreds of Serbs and Albanians, whi...
U toku voženje automobilom kroz grad,kamera je postavljena na krov automobila i tako je snimljeno sve što je ugao mogao da uhvati.Veliki broj detalja je kamera uspela da zabeleži.
Local Serb authorities in Kosovo’s Mitrovica have started building a concrete wall on the banks of the Ibar River, next to the bridge that ethnically divides the town’s Serb-populated north and largely Albanian-dominated south, as shown in footage shot on Friday. Video ID: 20161209-073 Video on Demand: http://www.ruptly.tv Contact: cd@ruptly.tv Twitter: http://twitter.com/Ruptly Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Ruptly
Die Mauer von Mitrovica wird abgerissen. Einen entsprechenden Beschluss hat das Parlament des Kosovo gefasst. Die Mauer verläuft am Fluss Ibar zwischen dem mehrheitlich von Serben bewohnten Nordteil der Stadt und dem Süden, im dem vornehmlich Kosovo-Albaner leben. Edita Tahiri, die für die Beziehungen zu Serbien zuständige Ministerin, sagte: "Diese von Serbien gebaute Mauer sollte die Situation im Kosovo destabilisieren. Wir werden nicht zulassen, dass diese schlechte Absicht Serbiens verwirkli… LESEN SIE MEHR: http://de.euronews.com/2016/12/29/kosovo-parlament-stimmt-fuer-abriss-der-mauer-von-mitrovica euronews: der meistgesehene Nachrichtensender in Europa. Abonnieren Sie! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=euronewsde euronews gibt es in 13 Sprachen: https://www.youtu...
Ndarja aktuale e qytetit
Work has begun to reopen a contested bridge in the Kosovan city of Mitrovica. It's part of an EU-brokered deal agreed three years ago that aims to normalise relations between Kosovo Serbs and Kosovo Albanian. It's hoped the opening of the bridge will help bring together the ethnic Albanians and Serbs who live largely separately in the city. Al Jazeera’s Emma Hayward reports. - Subscribe to our channel: http://aje.io/AJSubscribe - Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish - Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera - Check our website: http://www.aljazeera.com/
Streetfight in Mitrovica, Northern Kosovo in early 2008. The camouflaged soldiers are French KFOR, the black ones belong to Kosovo police forces. Also, a white UN tank can be seen. The whistling noises come from CS gas (tear gas) that the soldiers used against the rioting crowd, because "Rules of Engagement" do not alow them to shoot their weapons or use explosives. ---------------------- Strassenkampf in Mitrovica, Nordkosovo, Mitte 2008. Die Soldaten im Tarnuniform gehören zu französischen KFOR-Truppen, die schwarz gekleideten sind Kosovo Police. Die pfeifenden Geräusche entstehen bei der Benutzung von Tränengasgranaten, da die KFOR-Soldaten ihre Waffen nicht einsetzten dürfen, solagen sie nicht beschossen werden.