The Mehmed Pasha Kukavica Mosque () is a former mosque, in partial ruins, located in the town of FoÃÂa, in the Republika Srpska political division of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Completed in 1752, during the Ottoman era, the mosque was destroyed in 1992, during the Bosnian War.
It was one of five mosques in FoÃÂa which typologically belonged to a single-space domed mosque with an open exterior portico. It was located in Gornja (Upper) ÃÂarà ¡ija (FoÃÂa's old town), and was completely destroyed during the Bosnian War, with partial ruins extant. Built in 1751, it was a part of an architectural ensemble consisting of the mosque, madrasa (completed in 1758), clock tower and hammam (Turkish bath), all endowments of FoÃÂa-born Mehmed-paà ¡a Kukavica, one of the most prominent Ottoman governors of Bosnia.
The mosque and the rest of the architectural ensemble, as well as most of the old town of FoÃÂa (Ottoman architecture of ) was demolished in 1992 on the orders of the authorities of Republika Srpska, immediately after the attack and ethnic cleansing of its Muslim inhabitants.
The architectural ensemble of the mosque, medresa, clock tower and hammam of Mehmed-paà ¡a Kukavica in FoÃÂa are designated as a National Monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina by the Commission to Preserve National Monuments of Bosnia and Herzegovina.