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Reading: 32 Years Since the Death of Branko Mikulic: He Refused to Leave Besieged Sarajevo
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Sarajevo Times > Blog > WORLD NEWS > 32 Years Since the Death of Branko Mikulic: He Refused to Leave Besieged Sarajevo
WORLD NEWS

32 Years Since the Death of Branko Mikulic: He Refused to Leave Besieged Sarajevo

Published April 12, 2026
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Today marks 32 years since the death of Branko Mikulić, a prominent political figure who served as President of the Federal Executive Council (SIV), Prime Minister of Yugoslavia, and a member of the Presidency of both the SFR Yugoslavia and the Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Mikulić died in April 1994 in besieged Sarajevo, a city that endured one of the longest sieges in modern history.

Although he had opportunities to leave, Mikulić chose to remain in Sarajevo throughout the nearly four-year siege, which lasted 44 months and claimed more than 11,500 lives, including 1,601 children. His decision to stay alongside citizens during the most difficult period of the city’s history has remained a symbol of solidarity and commitment.

Born in 1928 in Pograđe near Gornji Vakuf-Uskoplje, Mikulić spent decades in public service, playing a key role in the political and economic development of Bosnia and Herzegovina within the former Yugoslavia. He died without witnessing the end of the war or the liberation of Sarajevo.

Mikulić was buried at the St. Joseph cemetery in Sarajevo, in a funeral attended by between 2,000 and 2,500 citizens despite the ongoing siege.

During the war, he actively worked to inform the international community about the situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In a letter addressed to Juan Antonio Samaranch, then president of the International Olympic Committee, Mikulić warned of the scale of destruction and human suffering caused by the aggression against the country. He described the killing of civilians, mass displacement, and the destruction of infrastructure, cultural heritage, and institutions, emphasizing that Sarajevo was under complete blockade and facing hunger and disease.

Mikulić also stressed that solutions to the crisis must come from within Bosnia and Herzegovina, underlining the unity of its people despite the conflict.

Historians and contemporaries describe him as one of the most influential Bosnian politicians of the second half of the 20th century. According to historian Dženita Sarač-Rujanac, Mikulić played a significant role in initiating and implementing economic and social reforms aimed at strengthening Bosnia and Herzegovina’s development and statehood. His political work contributed to the country’s modernization and helped it overcome the status of an underdeveloped republic within Yugoslavia.

Three decades after his death, Branko Mikulić remains remembered as a statesman who chose to stand with his people in wartime Sarajevo, leaving behind a lasting legacy in the political history of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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