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A Bosnian woman passes the remains of a monument in southern city Mostar, 65 miles from the capital of Sarajevo, on Monday. A bomb blast destroyed earlier in the day destroyed the memorial honoring soldiers of Bosnia's Muslim-dominated wartime army.
By Maja Zuvela, Reuters
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina ? A bomb blast destroyed a monument to fallen soldiers of Bosnia's Muslim-dominated wartime army on Monday in the southern town of Mostar, where divisions between ethnic Croats and Muslims still run deep.
Police said an "explosive device" had destroyed the lily-shaped monument in front of Mostar's city hall in the early hours of Monday morning.
Bosnia's international peace overseer, Valentin Inzko, said he was "appalled" by the attack and appealed for calm.
"This violence must not be allowed to spread," Inzko said in a statement.
Home to around 70,000 people, Mostar saw heavy fighting during Bosnia's 1992-95 war.
Despite Western efforts to encourage reintegration, the town remains largely divided between Bosnian Muslims (Bosniaks) on the east bank of the Neretva river and Croats on the west, where the city hall is located.
No one was injured in the explosion.
"Police are investigating the circumstances and hope to locate the perpetrator soon," Srecko Bosnjak, spokesman for the Mostar police, said.
The monument to the Bosnian army was built last year, next to a memorial in honor of Croat veterans of the conflict.
Post-war violence in Mostar has been largely confined to clashes between rival football fans, but political leaders continue to resist the efforts of Western overseers to unify the town.
Each community has its own utility services, electricity provider and education system.
Ethnic politicking has paralyzed the town more than once, and in October last year Mostar was the only town in Bosnia where local elections were postponed due to a dispute over how to hold the vote.
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