Every now and then you hear stuff about putative municipalities here and there in the Livno and Herzegovina Cantons. I don't know how serious those attempts are and sometimes I wonder if it isn't in part a response to people trying to organize municipalities elsewhere.
In the Herzegovina Canton you sometimes hear about a proposed municipality centered around the town of Počitelj which is part of the Čapljina municipality. This is a drawing that someone had posted in the municipal borders thread.
Like I said earlier I don’t know how serious this attempt is and I don’t think I have ever heard any formal organization set up to create. But if there were, I’m sure the municipality of Čapljina would block the creation of it since it would have to sign off on it. There is also the larger question/issue of a Muslim dominated municipality south of Mostar and what the long term implications of it are since the muslims want to try and punch out to the Adriatic.
One thing you will see from this crudely drawn map is that the muslim-dominated villages combined have something like 3,700 people (per the 1991 census) and you see the area of Rotimlja in the neighboring Stolac municipality. So in order for a Počitelj municipality to happen you would also need the Stolac municipality to sign off on letting Rotimlja go.
BUT there is the question of what is the real demographic picture of the area is and how that comes into play. Lots of Croats from central Bosnia moved into what would be the Počitelj municipality and I think Rotimlja might now have a Croat majority. Though I suppose you could argue that the creation of the Počitelj municipality might encourage muslims to return to their home areas. But then what do you do with Croats from Bosnia that live there and or may be opposed to the creation of it?
The other proposed municipality I have seen would be one in Livno and usually from what I have seen the proposal would be to form it within the city limits. I don’t know how you would draw it as I don’t think I have ever seen a map for this. Again the Livno municipality would have to sign off on this and I don’t think that would happen anytime soon.
One thing I wanted to point out is that a proposed muslim dominated Livno municipality would be geographically small and possibly confined to portions of the town of Livno. I don’t know how it would survive economically. To be honest I don’t know what industry the town of Livno has so I can’t speak to that.
But maybe in some ways this scenario would parallel the creation of Ravne-Brčko and Gornje Ravne and what effect it might have on Brčko itself. If you look on a 1991 demographic map, you will see that most of the muslims are confined to Brcko and a small strip south of it that includes villages of Brka, Maoča, Gornji Rahić, etc but for the most part the overwhelming majority of muslims live in Brčko. Something like 60%. I do know Brčko had some industry but I don’t know how much of it survived the war and what is now going on economically there.
Contrast the situation of Croats in what would be in the new municipality and you will see that something like 85%+ Croats living in the Brčko municipality were living in villages that would have comprised the new Ravne-Brčko municipality. Just as an FYI Gornje Ravne would have been a part of Ravne-Brčko and then created later. That’s how it was explained to me. I have always heard that some of the more productive areas and well to do areas in the Brčko municipality before the war were some of those Croat villages.
There is no question that what would be left of Brčko municipality, would have taken an economic hit at the loss of these areas, which would have annoyed the muslims not to mention the establishment of new Croat political center in the area at Seonjaci (the village of Bijela was bigger but don’t ask me why) and later on at Zovik when Gornje Ravne was created. Finally since Ravne-Brčko would have bordered the Sava river it would have cut the corridor, which would have annoyed the Serbs.
The question is how big of an economic hit would Brčko have and to tie this together with Livno would the muslims be shooting themselves in the foot economically if they created a municipality within the town of Livno? However, if you are looking to establish a political center, does economic viability really matter as long as you can get a political foothold in an area?