A drone view shows cracked land which raises concerns among residents and local authorities that Sarajevo is at risk of a landslide during rainy season, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, November 6, 2024.REUTERS/Amel Emric A drone view shows Sarajevo suburb of Sirokaca where as local authorities claim, a landslide is possible during rainy season due to uncontrolled construction of news buildings, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, November 11, 2024. REUTERS/Amel Emric A street view of Sarajevo suburb Sirokaca where a landslide can possibly occur, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, November 11, 2024.

REUTERS/Amel Emric A drone view shows Sarajevo suburb of Sirokaca where as local authorities claim, a landslide is possible during rainy season due to uncontrolled construction of news buildings, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, November 11, 2024. REUTERS/Amel Emric Armin Djono, local resident, inspects a cracked land at the landslide spot caused, as he claims, by uncontrolled construction on the hills above Sarajevo, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, November 6, 2024.REUTERS/Amel Emric SARAJEVO - Bosnian pensioner Vejsil Kajanija has a new routine - every day he walks to inspect large faults in the ground that have appeared since construction began on the slopes above his historic Sarajevo neighbourhood.

Some are deep, large enough to jump across, and they are widening, raising the risk of landslides just as winter rains pick up after a dry summer, Kajanija, local officials and ex.