Pen-ners, A short post to explain the relative territorial distributions in Bosnia. At the time of the unilateral declaration of independence by the Muslim led government, Serbs and Yugoslavs represented just under 40 per cent of the population, but they inhabited approximately 60 per cent of the land. The reason for this is that the Serbs were disporportionately in the poorer agricultural areas while the Muslims and Croats were more concentrated in the urban and more developed areas. This dates back to the medieval Ottoman rule period under the feudal system. In order to retain feudal lands, it was required that the lords convert to the Muslim religion. Thus the landed aristocracy, if you can call them that, became Muslims while the peasants retained their Orthodox religion. However, under the Ottoman land tenure system, fiefs were largely a form of allocation of taxing ability and the lords were not necessarily, or indeed primarily tied to the land -- and hence were more urban. At the present time, the Bosnian Serbs control about 70 per cent of the land area -- i.e. an additional 10 per cent. During the last negotiations that came close to agreement, the Serbs agreed to accept a division amounting to I think it was 52 per cent -- i.e. a reduction in both the population coverage and of the area they now control. As well, almost all the major industrial centres and developed areas would be included either in the Muslim or the Croatian republics. (Sorry I can't lay my hands on the exact municipalities at this moment but I have them somewhere.) I intend to take up some of the points that my postings have engendered, but I will do so as my last post on the subject. However, I can't let one factual matter pass since I think it represents the kind of attempt to diminish my argument by claiming I made a factual error. I think it was Barkley who corrected me by saying to the effect that I had used the term "Bosnia and Herzegovin" and he said it should be Bosnia-Herzegovina. In fact, he is wrong. About three weeks ago I was watching news reports from Sarajevo supplied by Bosnian television. In the corner of the screen was the logo "BiH". What does the "i" stand for? In Serbo-Croat, "i" is "and". But perhaps the Bosnians don"t know the name of their republic. I rest my case. Paul Phillips