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Article: Toughing out the war alone: Sarajevo residents face cold, hunger, talk of U.N. leaving. (Originated from Knight-Ridder Newspapers)
- Article from:
- Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service
- Article date:
- December 13, 1994
- Author:
CopyrightCOPYRIGHT 1994 Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)
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SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina _ All along Logavina Street makeshift aluminum stoves are devouring people's lives.
Desa Stanic is burning her summer sandals, the slipcover of an arm chair, the outgrown clothing and schoolbooks of her teenage children.
Sead Vranic is burning a beloved cherry tree from his garden _and resisting his son's pleas to tear up the parquet floors of the family's imposing Austro-Hungarian mansion.
Zijo and Jela Dzino are among the few still burning firewood. Their son Nermin, a Bosnian soldier, carried it home from the front lines. But he came home a few days ago sick with hepatitis, so now they are eyeing the toolshed in their back yard.
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Article: Role of religion and ethnicity in Sarajevo misunderstood, ...
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service;
February 17, 1994 ;
700+ words
... ... was a Muslim,'' said Zijo Dzino, a Muslim resident of Logavina Street, whose wife is a Croat. ``Sometimes things are a little ... grandparents and to get better medical treatment, but the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees has refused permission ...
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