The Dayton Agreement finalized the demarcation between the
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (FBiH) and
Republika Srpska (RS), the two post-war entities of the country. The Sarajevo suburbs of
Ilijaš,
Vogošća,
Hadžići,
Ilidža, and
Grbavica were incorporated into Federation, while other peripheral parts of the former Sarajevo municipality became part of RS (see
Istočno Sarajevo). The five areas had been held by Bosnian Serbs during the war. The Serb community massively left the Bosnian government-controlled part of Sarajevo for Republika Srpska. Their number was reported in 1996 as 62,000, with sources generally giving an estimate of between 60,000 and 70,000. The exodus of
Sarajevo Serbs was one of many exoduses of Serbs during Bosnian War. Right before this exodus there was another exodus of 17,000 Serbs from
Odžak. Both of them were preceded by massive exodus of 200,000 Serbs from Croatia during
Operation Storm which set precedents for the exodus of Sarajevo Serbs. It was reported on 1 January 1996 that 'rumours and blind panic trigger mass flight from [the] city's contested suburbs'. Australian-Bosnian professor Dino Murtic emphasized that exodus of Sarajevo Serbs was massive and planned and that Bosnian president
Izetbegović initially demonstrated indifference about it stating that the people of Sarajevo "finally deserved to be free of their murderers". After some time, Izetbegović called Serbs to stay in Sarajevo. Some Serbs exhumated the graves of their ancestors from Sarajevo graveyards to graveyards near their new accommodation. == Responsibility ==