Mostar should be different: on paper, it is the only truly mixed Bosnian city.
The Old Mostar Bridge, the giant Buddhas of Bamiyan, and now the Mausoleums of Timbuktu.
Ms Becker, known as the Angel of Mostar, arrived at Stansted Airport near London on Friday evening.
Today, UNESCO and the World Bank are coordinating the work of multicultural teams rebuilding the Mostar Bridge.
In that sense, Mostar is a template for the rest of the country.
Since 2004, the administrations of the two halves of Mostar have been unified.
The revelry was tempered by reports that Serb separatists seized 11 citizens in Sarajevo and police killed a man in Mostar.
In 1995, a French air force cargo plane landed at the Bosnian city of Mostar, becoming the first aircraft to do so since 1992.
Since 2004, the administrations of Mostar's two halves have been merged.
As the wide sweep of the Neretva river runs down from the high ground, it enters the city of Mostar where it narrows between steep-sided river banks.
Earlier it appeared Ms Becker, dubbed the Angel of Mostar for her aid work, would allow a drip, allaying fears that she could become seriously ill through dehydration.
There was something spectral about the sight of the old bridge at Mostar - as though the normal laws of the physical universe did not apply to it.
Ms Becker made her reputation in 1993 when she rescued 25 wounded children from the Muslim sector of the southern Bosnian town of Mostar while it was under Croat attack.
Along with the focus on the development of culture in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Programme supported the rehabilitation of three symbols of multiculturalism: the Orthodox Church in Mostar, the Ferhadija Mosque in Banja Luka, and the Monastery in Plehan near Derventa.
At the summit, the presidents of Bosnia, Croatia and Serbia agreed to resume all-party talks, suspend U.N. sanctions on Bosnian Serbs, work to ease tensions in Sarajevo and the divided town of Mostar and adopt a policy on war crimes and prisoners.
CNN: Bosnia talks founder as key Bosnian Serb fails to turn up
The remaining DynCorp trucks were packed with guns and men, including two specialists in land-mine and explosives removal: a husky, soft-spoken Samoan named Suani, who often wore a sarong and draped a kaffiyeh over his head, like an Arab sheikh, and Anton, a Croatian from Mostar, who rarely spoke.
应用推荐