Tito ignored the cultural differences among the people in the region and instead tried to blend them into one. Although this worked well while he was alive to enforce his domestic policy with force, the differences of the cultures persisted.
The two largest ethnic groups in Yugoslavia were the Serbs and the Croats.
Ethnic groups in the former Yugoslavia continue to fight due to historical animosities, political manipulation, and unresolved issues stemming from the breakup of the country in the 1990s. Deep-seated ethnic divisions, nationalist ideologies, and competition for territory also contribute to ongoing tensions and conflicts.
Some similarities are that some ethnic groups forced other ethnic groups to move out of their area and go back to their own ethnic group.
Clinton handled tensions between ethnic groups in former Yugoslavia by performing a lift and strike operation which entailed bombing Serb supply lines and lifting an embargo that prevented the shipment of military arms to the former Yugoslavia. .
yugoslavia
Strict Communist rule
Serbia and Croatia
Differences among groups of people and individuals based on ethnicity
Yugoslavia was never a "real" country. As soon as the strong hand of Tito disappeared, it more or less inevitably returned to its constituent ethnic groups.
establish independence and self-government. (: A+
The Hutu and the Tutsi have had differences for many years.
Czechoslovakia broke up peacefully (it's called the Velvet Divorce) whereas the break-up with Yugoslavia was the result of several messy wars that included war crimes from both sides and ethnic cleansing.