Moraviskameja is the southernmost of the ten federal districts of Kresimiria. It is the center of the nation’s Bosken ethnic minority and the heart of a long-standing separatist movement that seeks unification with the neighboring country of Boskenmark.
History
Historically and culturally tied to Boskenmark, Moraviskameja was incorporated into Kresimiria in 1921 following the defeat of the Eastern Pravoslavic Confederacy in the Kresimirian Unification War. This incorporation was immediately contested by the local population and led to the formation of the militant separatist group BRC-21.
For four decades, the district was the site of a high-intensity insurgency. It was the location of the 1924 assassination of Senator Ivana Simuna, a pivotal event in the Republic’s early history. The conflict de-escalated following the signing of the 1961 Treaty of Brod Moravice.
Politics and Demographics
Moraviskameja is demographically distinct from the rest of Kresimiria. The majority of its population is ethnically Bosken and adheres to the Pravoslavic Faith, rather than the state religion of Kresimirianism.
Politically, the district holds a unique status. Under the terms of the 1961 treaty, its residents are exempt from the Faith Restriction Clause, meaning they can vote without being adherents of the state religion. Since the legalization of Bosken political representation, the district’s two Assembly seats have been exclusively held by the Bosken Liberation Front. Despite the peace treaty, a low-level insurgency has been maintained by the hardline splinter group AFIM.