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Date May 2017 Marks available 6 Reference code 17M.1.BP.TZ0.19
Level Both SL and HL Paper Paper 1 - first exams 2017 Time zone TZ0
Command term Compare and contrast Question number 19 Adapted from N/A

Question

The sources and questions relate to Case study 2: Kosovo (1989–2002) – Causes of the conflict: Ethnic tensions between Serbs and Kosovar Albanians, rising Albanian nationalism.

Source S

Djuric Bosko, a Serb who moved out of Kosovo, being interviewed by an American researcher in 1995.

I was a police officer for 32 years but I had to leave … My neighbour was watering his yard and then he would “forget” to turn off the water and my basement would be full of water. Then they would go through my yard shouting: “Go, move out, what are you doing here?” … It was not safe to walk during the night. Kids were often assaulted and beaten [by Albanians] … My kids had problems at work. Serbs were never given promotions, so my children moved away…

Resolving the conflict in Kosovo depends mostly on foreign policy. Albanians have huge support from outside and therefore they don’t agree to living jointly with the Serbs. They want an ethnically clean Kosovo. If they get independence, they will expel the few remaining Serbs from there …

Their natality [birth rate] is, I think, the greatest in Europe. Every woman of theirs gives birth to ten to fifteen children, and very few Serbs have more than two or three kids. Emigrants from Albania were coming, too. Even the SUP [Secretariat of Internal Affairs, the Serbian police] was buying properties in Kosovo for them.

The sources and questions relate to Case study 2: Kosovo (1989–2002) – Causes of the conflict: Ethnic tensions between Serbs and Kosovar Albanians, rising Albanian nationalism.

Source T

Tim Judah, a reporter and political analyst, writing in an historical investigation The Serbs: history, myth and the destruction of Yugoslavia (2009).

Hostility between the communities was aggravated in the 1990s by poverty, which in turn became increasingly difficult to redress [remedy] because of the Albanian population explosion coupled with Yugoslavia’s growing economic crisis. Increasing numbers of Serbs sought their fortune elsewhere, and in villages with small Serb populations the more Serbs that left, the more insecure were those that remained behind. They felt uncomfortable surrounded by a hostile Albanian population. Albanians claim that Serbs began to leave for economic reasons, and Serbs that they did so because they were threatened, and even attacked. There is truth in both arguments. Anti-Serb graffiti were daubed [painted] on the walls along with demands for a republic. The Yugoslav police and army clamped down harshly when angry unemployed Albanian youths demonstrated.

Compare and contrast what Sources S and T reveal about the relations between Albanians and Serbs in Kosovo.

Markscheme

Apply the markbands that provide the “best fit” to the responses given by candidates and award credit wherever it is possible to do so. The following material is an indication of what candidates may elect to write about in their responses. It is neither prescriptive nor exhaustive and no set answer is required.

Comparisons:

Contrasts:

Examiners report

[N/A]

Syllabus sections

Prescribed subjects: first exams 2017 » 5. Conflict and intervention » Case study 2: Kosovo (1989–2002) » Causes of the conflict » Ethnic tensions between Serbs and Kosovar Albanians; rising Albanian nationalism
Prescribed subjects: first exams 2017 » 5. Conflict and intervention » Case study 2: Kosovo (1989–2002) » Causes of the conflict
Prescribed subjects: first exams 2017 » 5. Conflict and intervention » Case study 2: Kosovo (1989–2002)
Prescribed subjects: first exams 2017 » 5. Conflict and intervention
Prescribed subjects: first exams 2017

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