Surdulica () is a town and municipality located in the PÃÂinja District of southern Serbia. As of 2022, the population of the town is 9,242, while the municipality has 16,991 inhabitants.
During World War I, 2,000âÂÂ3,000 men were massacred by Bulgarian forces in the town from 1915 to 1916.
Over the course of the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Surdulica was subject to NATO bombings on multiple occasions. By the end of the bombing campaign, approximately fifty homes were destroyed and around 600 more were damaged in Surdulica alone. On April 27, 1999, NATO missiles struck several houses in the southern town of Surdulica. A CNN journalist named Alessio Vinci subsequently visited the local morgue, where he reported 16 civilians killed as a result of the attack. One of Serbia's public broadcasters, RTS, reported that 20 civilians were killed during the April 27 bombings, whereas Human Rights Watch only recorded eleven deaths. Many of the victims had been killed in a single house on Zmaj Jova street, owned by Vojislav MiliÃÂ. MiliÃÂ's family and several neighbors took refuge in MiliÃÂ's basement when his house was struck by two bombs, after which nine people were killed in his house alone.
Over the night of May 30âÂÂ31, 1999, NATO airstrikes destroyed a sanatorium and a retirement home in Surdulica. Human Rights Watch published the names of the 23 civilians killed in the sanatorium.
The town stands at 480 m above sea level; it is surrounded by mountains to the north by ÃÂemernik and to the south by Vardenik; the highest peak Streà ¡er stands at 1875 meters high. Some twenty kilometres along the river Vrla and up the mountains there is a highland called Vlasina. In the 1950s, a man made dam created a lake called Vlasinsko Jezero (Vlasina Lake) which is famous for its peat floating islands which were harvested by local farmers. The highland of Vlasina is unique natural reserve with rich wildlife in particular the many rare species of migrating birds that use this unique place as a stop on their migrating way north or south. The lake is rich with fish and is one of largest reservoirs of clean water in that part of the country. The surrounding soil is lush and green resembling the Devon Downs or Argentine pampas. It presents great potential for cattle breeding and dairy production. It has distinct four seasons with long snowy winters and brief hot summers. There are also two streams running from the mountains and joining at the town of Surdulica. This is where the Romanovce River joins the Vrla River on their way to South Morava and thence to the Danube and the Black Sea.
Aside from the town of Surdulica, the municipality includes the following settlements:
According to the 2011 census results, the municipality of Surdulica has a population of 20,319 inhabitants.
The ethnic composition of the municipality of Surdulica:
The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2018):
There are two primary schools in the town of Surdulica - Vuk Karadà ¾iàand Jovan JovanoviàZmaj, and several schools in the villages around the town. There are three secondary schools: Svetozar MarkoviàGimnazija (Grammar School), Josif PanÃÂiàSchool of Agriculture and a technical college, Nikola Tesla. In line with falling population in the municipality of Surdulica the number of high school students is also falling.
The local football team is FK Radnik Surdulica, which play in the Serbian SuperLiga.