Dejan Pavlovic, director of the National Park Sutjeska, stated that a number of new projects and positive changes are taking place in the National Park Sutjeska.
He revealed that they recently received a grant from the US Embassy in the amount of 32,000 USD. It is a project entitled “Let’s give a chance to the future, Sutjeska 2016” and all primary schools from the area of Foca and Gorazde, about 200 students with their teachers, will participate in this project.
“All of this suggests that some new, better times are coming for sure for the National Park Sutjeska. Tjentiste, the jewel of the former Yugoslavia, is slowly getting its former glory back, so that better times are definitely coming for the National Park Sutjeska” said Pavlovic.
Talking about the period of Yugoslavia, the golden times of the National Park Sutjeska, Pavlovic said:
“During the last Tito’s visit to the National Park Sutjeska, the turnover was a million German marks. It was an entire system in which everything had its purpose. There was a pool occupying 16,000 m2 which, when opened, was the largest pool in Europe. There was the hotel Sutjeska with 134 places as well, then youth home which included a discotheque and accompanying facilities…Unfortunately, a lot of these facilities was devastated in the war.”
Pavlovic said that most of tourists today are coming from Slovenia and Croatia, as well as other parts of the world.
These days in Tjentiste, within the National park Sutjeska, will be held a music festival OK Fest, which, according to Pavlovic, is an excellent promotion of the national park.
“This place is the perfect combination of nature and the legacy of history, and besides, it is located in a strategically good location – only an hour and ten minutes away from Sarajevo, hour and a half from Mostar, and in less than two hours you are on the Adriatic Sea, so why this would not be an interesting tourist region for young people?”
“When nature makes the jungle, it looks beautiful, a gift of nature, but when a man wants to do something, he makes the jungle of cities without any plan. National Parks are making huge profits in the world, but they realize it from visitors, not hydropower plants nor tycoons who are coming here and making hotels and spas. BiH and this region have good laws, we only need to respect them, to realize what is the priority. And the priority of these places is to preserve biodiversity, which means to respect the laws as well as European and global practice.”
(Source: L. C./Klix.ba)