Bosnians began arriving in Britain in early 1992 fleeing violence spreading across Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosnia). Most who came did so not because they requested it or even wanted it, but because they it was arranged for them by international agencies such as the Red Cross in collaboration with the British government. The vast majority were forced by events to leave their homes and families behind and most had very little idea of the sort of environment they were coming to. Most settled in London, East Midlands, and West Yorkshire, while smaller numbers were settled in Newcastle upon Tyne and Scotland, as part of a government programme designed to coordinate local authority responses.
Most of those early arrivals were given temporary “leave to remain” status, which was to be renewed annually, giving them little security and adding to individual and collective stress, anxiety and fear that entire families would be returned to at any point. Although fighting was halted with the signing of the Dayton Peace Agreement (DPA) in December 1995, tensions remained simmering as large parts of Bosnian were completely ethnically-homogenised through genocide, mass rape, incarceration in concentration camps and large-scale destruction of the built environment. Some families temporarily resettled in the UK, fearing imminent forced return to Bosnia, decided to relocate to the United States which happened to view Bosnian refugees more favourably at that time.
The British people showed great humanity and support for the Bosnian people, both those arriving as refugees as well as those displaced in Bosnia, which helps to explain why the Bosnian community is so well integrated and settled in Britain today. Currently there are approximately 10,000 to 15,000 Bosnians living in Britain, including those originally resettled during the war and their descendants.