The Airport
Bridges
Cemeteries
Dangerous Zones
Gardens
Gas Stations
Hospitals
Law School
Markets
Maternity Hospital
Oslobodjenje
Parks
Places of Worship
Protection
Shells
Skenderija
Snipers
The Academy of Arts
The Bakery
Turkish Baths (Hamam)
The Borders
The Brewery
The Brick-yard Tunnel
The "Bristol" Hotel
The Centaurs
The City Hall
The City Museum - The Faculty of Theology
The "Elektroprivreda" building
The "Energoinvest" building
The Fountain (Sebilj)
The Holiday Inn
The Markale Market
The "Marshal Tito" Army Barracks
The National Theater
The Olympic Museum
The Parliament
The "Parrot" building (Papagajka)
The Post Office
The Presidency building
The "PTT" building
The "Radio-Television" building
The Railway Station
The "Red-Cross" building & the "Sutjeska" cinema
The Sky
The Stadium
The State Museum
The Student Hall & Disneyland
The Tobacco Factory
The Tunnel
The UNIS
The UNPROFOR (United Nations protection Force)
The Visegrad Gate
The Zetra
Transportation
Trenches
Trscanska Street
Weapons
 

Sarajevo Survival Map 92-96

SURVIVAL MAP
TEXT LEGEND PREVIEW


THE POST OFFICE

The Austro-Hungarian building of the Post Office, located on the riverside, was destroyed during the night of May 2, 1992. Terrorists placed the dynamite inside the building and after it blew up it was shelled by inflammable shells until it burnt down. The bags containing the last Sarajevo mail to places outside Sarajevo burnt down. The phone-boxes were destroyed by the shelling. The outcome of the destruction of the central Post Office and the lack of electricity was, according to the Sarajevo Municipal Assembly data from April 1993, that out of more than 150,000 phone lines only 2,000 were operational. Telephone lines between Sarajevo and the rest of the world were not operational during the whole time of the siege. During the siege the communication with the outside world was maintained by amateur radio operators and a few satellite phones. Links with relatives, friends and business partners were established through foreigners who brought in and out the messages, which often grew to book size. In February 1996 an exhibition of sculptures was placed inside the burnt out Post Office building.

     



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