SISAK COUNTY DUE TO UNEMPLOYMENT SISAK, April 21 (Hina) - An estimated 700 Bosnian Croat refugees who settled Gvozd at Kordun (about 80 kilometres south of Zagreb) have recently left the area for other Croatian regions or other
countries. Several hundreds of Bosnian Croat settlers left Dvor and a hundred of Croats, who had found shelter in Kukuruzari, did not live any longer in that municipality, Count Prefect of Sisak-Moslavina, Djuro Brodarac, told Hina on Wednesday. All of them have gone as they had no means of living. Even three years after the liberation operation "Storm" they did not get jobs, they could not educate children and could see no prospects in the area, he complained. War-affected areas of Sisak-Moslavina County have no problems with ensuring the housing, but the chief problem are that the economy has not yet been reconstructed, no new jobs have been created. Neither Croatian returnees nor Bosnian
SISAK, April 21 (Hina) - An estimated 700 Bosnian Croat refugees who
settled Gvozd at Kordun (about 80 kilometres south of Zagreb) have
recently left the area for other Croatian regions or other
countries.
Several hundreds of Bosnian Croat settlers left Dvor and a hundred
of Croats, who had found shelter in Kukuruzari, did not live any
longer in that municipality, Count Prefect of Sisak-Moslavina,
Djuro Brodarac, told Hina on Wednesday.
All of them have gone as they had no means of living. Even three
years after the liberation operation "Storm" they did not get jobs,
they could not educate children and could see no prospects in the
area, he complained.
War-affected areas of Sisak-Moslavina County have no problems with
ensuring the housing, but the chief problem are that the economy has
not yet been reconstructed, no new jobs have been created. Neither
Croatian returnees nor Bosnian Croat settlers do not see their
future in those areas if the Croatian Government fails to offer
greater and speedier support, the County Prefect said.
(hina) jn ms