All the chats in Federation of B&H

  1. Chats in Ilijaš
  2. Chats in Podhum
  3. Chats in Čitluk
  4. Chats in Tešanjka
  5. Chats in Sanica
  6. Chats in Bosansko Grahovo
  7. Chats in Orahovica Donja
  8. Chats in Donja Mahala
  9. Chats in Ostrožac
  10. Chats in Jelah
  11. Chats in Mahala
  12. Chats in Kačuni
  13. Chats in Gornja Tuzla
  14. Chats in Dubrave Gornje
  15. Chats in Pazarić
  16. Chats in Busovača
  17. Chats in Turbe
  18. Chats in Blagaj
  19. Chats in Grude
  20. Chats in Ustikolina
  21. Chats in Novi Šeher
  22. Chats in Vitina
  23. Chats in Orguz
  24. Chats in Zabrišće
  25. Chats in Neum
  26. Chats in Izačić
  27. Chats in Pajić Polje
  28. Chats in Glamoč
  29. Chats in Gornje Moštre
  30. Chats in Dobrinje
  31. Chats in Gnojnica
  32. Chats in Drežnica
  33. Chats in Vidoši
  34. Chats in Dubrave Donje
  35. Chats in Polje
  36. Chats in Voljevac
  37. Chats in Gornja Breza
  38. Chats in Karadaglije
  39. Chats in Ilići
  40. Chats in Kobilja Glava
  41. Chats in Orašje
  42. Chats in Liješnica
  43. Chats in Skokovi
  44. Chats in Vukovije Donje
  45. Chats in Kočerin
  46. Chats in Donja Dubica
  47. Chats in Puračić
  48. Chats in Olovo
Federation of B&H

Not to be confused with Bosnia and Herzegovina or the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina is one of the two political entities that make up the current Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, together with the Republika Srpska. The Federation was created with the aim of being the home of communities of Bosnian and Croatian origin from the Washington Agreements signed on March 18,1994, by which the Constituent Assembly was created, which was maintained until 1996. Federation limits to the north, east and southeast with the Republika Srpska, to the south with the Adriatic Sea and with Croatia, as well as to the west and northwest.

The Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina is inhabited mainly by Bosnians and Croats, which is why it is sometimes informally known as the Bosnian-Croatian Federation. However, after the decision adopted in 2001 by the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Serbs were officially considered as the third constituent ethnic group of the Federation. This recognition was reciprocal for Bosnians and Croats in the Republika Srpska. The Federation has its own capital, government, flag and coat of arms, president, parliament, customs and security bodies, postal system as well as a flag carrier. It also has its own Armed Forces, called Vojska Federacije Bosne and Hercegovine, although they are under the direct control of the Minister of Defense of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina, as is the Vojska Republike Srpske.

Both bodies began their integration at the end of 2005, disappearing as separate entities on January 1,2006 to form 6 months later, on June 6, the Armed Forces of Bosnia and Herzegovina, under the Minister of Defense of Bosnia and Herzegovina.


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