Neum is the only town situated along Bosnia and Herzegovina's 20-kilometre (12 mi) coastline,[1] making it the country's only access to the Adriatic Sea.[2]
Neum is 47 km (29 mi) northwest of Dubrovnik, 50 km (31 mi) south of Mostar, and 122 km (76 mi) southwest of Sarajevo, the country's capital.
The Bosnia and Herzegovina coastal strip of Neum cuts off the southernmost Croatian exclave from the rest of Croatia. This is a result of the Treaty of Karlowitz of 1699. Since 1991 and the breakup of Yugoslavia, the border between Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Neum region have been international borders.[3]
Neum
Promenade along Neum's shoreline
Waterpolo court in Neum
Zenička beach in Neum
Residential Neum
Neum Lighthouse
Feral Beach on the southern side of Neum peninsula
Subdivision
The municipality includes the town of Neum (municipal seat) and several villages:[4]
Neum has two border crossing checkpoints with Croatia on the European route E65 or Adriatic Highway which connects the two parts of Croatia's Dalmatian coast. Neum 1 is located to the northwest of the city, with the Klek border checkpoint on the Croatian side. Neum 2 is located to the southeast, with the Croatian border checkpoint at Zaton Doli.
Consideration was given to a plan to build a new advanced naval base at Neum-Klek by the Austro-Hungarian Navy. General Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf considered fortifying Neum with coastal batteries and torpedo craft to supplement seafront defenses (in order to prevent Italian raids, or worse a large scale Italian landing). The project never got past the planning stage prior to the outbreak of World War I in 1914.[7]
In 1918, as a consequence of Austro-Hungarian defeat, Neum joined the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes which would become the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929. Under the Karađorđević dynasty, the Yugoslav Government ignored the historical borders twice: in 1929, when the Neum area was included in the Littoral Banovina, and in 1939 when, following the Cvetković–Maček Agreement, it was included in the Banovina of Croatia. Josip Broz Tito's federal Yugoslavia was founded on the principle, declared at the 1943 AVNOJ session in Jajce and comparatively well-respected by the Đilas commission in 1945, of establishing the federative republics in their borders of 1878, which is why the Neum enclave is now part of independent Bosnia and Herzegovina, including most of Klek (Ponta Kleka, Rep Kleka), the two islets Veliki and Mali Školj and the rock of Lopata in the Bay of Klek.[8]
Since the 1990s, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina have been in negotiations on how to handle traffic across the Neum region, including signing a Neum Agreement. When Croatia was admitted to the European Union in 2013, the border crossings in the Neum region became governed as external borders of the EU.[citation needed] The construction and opening in 2022 of the Pelješac Bridge, which bypasses Neum entirely, has significance for Croatia's integrity and also for its future Schengen Area membership and the EU as a whole. It significantly improves traffic flow and the traffic connection of Dubrovnik to the rest of mainland Croatia, avoiding negotiating long, costly queues at Neum, and strict customs checks twice within the space of 20 kilometres (12 mi).
The construction cost was €420 million, to which the EU contributed by allocating €357 million from Cohesion Policy funds. The bridge is among the largest infrastructures in Croatia currently and one of the most substantial EU infrastructural investment ever. The work was completed in mid 2022. The EU is also funding supporting infrastructure, such as the construction of access roads, including tunnels, bridges and viaducts, the building of an 8 km-long bypass near the town of Ston and upgrading works on the existing road D414.[9]
There are Bosniak plans to convert Neum to a freight port, contrary to the wishes of the local population and international laws and agreements concerning the ecologically significant and protected Bay of Mali Ston, of which Bay of Neum is a part. There are plans to build a seaport, rail and a motorway and thus the Croatian bridge must have a high clearance according to the view of Bosnia and Herzegovina's Bosniak political parties. Due to the above, the Republic of Croatia has significantly increased the height of the bridge by adapting it to ships whose dimensions cannot enter the Bay of Neum at all. Today the main freight port for Bosnia and Herzegovina is Ploče (in Croatia) farther north, which has a railway to Bosnia and Herzegovina.[citation needed]
Climate
The climate of the area is Mediterranean, characterized by mild winters and dry summers, with three times more rain in the rainier than in the drier months, during which the mean precipitation does not exceed 40 mm (1.6 in). The mean yearly precipitation observed is of 1,316 mm (51.8 in). The dominant winds come from the north, north-east and north-west. The average sea temperature (as observed in Neum) ranges from 13 °C (55 °F) in January to 28 °C (82 °F) in July and August.
Vegetation is the evergreen Mediterranean type, and subtropical flora (palm trees, agaves, cacti) grow in Neum and its surroundings.
All demographic data per Statistica.ba website:[4]
Population
Population of settlements – Neum municipality
Settlement
1971.
1981.
1991.
2013.
Total
4,781
4,030
4,325
4,960
1
Gradac
345
234
2
Hutovo
319
201
3
Neum
360
602
1,651
3,013
Ethnic composition
Ethnic composition – Neum town
2013.
1991.
1981.
1971.
Total
3,013 (100%)
1,651 (100%)
602 (100%)
360 (100%)
Croats
2,938 (97.51%)
1,338 (81.04%)
499 (82.89%)
335 (93.06%)
Bosniaks
33 (1.161%)
89 (5.391%)
17 (2.824%)
3 (0.833%)
Serbs
21 (0.697%)
98 (5.936%)
25 (4.153%)
10 (2.778%)
Unaffiliated
6 (0.199%)
Albanians
3 (0.1%)
4 (0.664%)
Unknown
3 (0.1%)
Others
3 (0.100%)
36 (2.180%)
3 (0.498%)
5 (1.389%)
Yugoslavs
2 (0.066%)
90 (5.451%)
47 (7.807%)
7 (1.944%)
Montenegrins
2 (0.066%)
6 (0.997%)
Macedonians
1 (0.166%)
Ethnic composition – Neum municipality
2013.
1991.
1981.
Total
4,960 (100%)
4,325 (100%)
4,030 (100%)
Croats
4,543 (97.64%)
3,792 (87.68%)
3,575 (88.71%)
Bosniaks
63 (1.397%)
190 (4.393%)
157 (3.896%)
Serbs
21 (0.451%)
207 (4.786%)
179 (4.442%)
Unaffiliated
7 (0.15%)
Unknown
7 (0.15%)
Albanians
3 (0.064%)
5 (0.124%)
Others
3 (0.064%)
46 (1.064%)
17 (0.422%)
Yugoslavs
2 (0.043%)
90 (2.081%)
89 (2.208%)
Montenegrins
2 (0.043%)
7 (0.174%)
Macedonians
1 (0.025%)
Culture and sport
The linđo is traditionally danced in the Neum region.[10] Neum celebrates the feast of Our Lady of Good Health as its municipal day. As part of the celebrations, Neum hosts the Music Festival Etnofest Neum. The town also hosts the Neum Animated Film Festival.[11]
Popular activities include swimming and sun bathing, beach-going, boating, and various other water-sports. Neum has a water polo club VK Jadran Neum, which is a member of the Croatian Water Polo Federation.
There is also an association football club HNK Neum.
Neum area has steep hills, stone-sandy beaches, and several large tourist hotels. Neum has about 5,000 beds for tourists, 1,810 in hotels with the remaining capacity in motels, villas, and private accommodation. Tourism in Neum is active only in the coastal region. Prices tend to be lower than in neighbouring Croatia, making it popular with shoppers. Tourism, and the commerce it brings, is the leading contributor to the economy of the area.
The inland area behind Neum has a rich archeological history and wilderness with centuries-old olive groves.