Albania (Albanian Shqipëria,
“Country of the
Eagle”), republic in southeastern Europe, officially known as the
Republic of Albania.
It lies along the northwestern edge of the Balkan Peninsula.
Separated from Italy by
only 76 km (47 mi) of the
Adriatic Sea, Albania, throughout its history, has been occupied by
Italian
powers expanding eastward into the Balkans or by Balkan powers expanding
westward. In the 1500s Albania came under the rule of the Ottoman Empire
(centered in what is now Turkey), and did not gain its independence
until 1912.
From 1944 to 1990 Albania was a staunchly Communist state, and in 1991
Albania
began its transition to a democratic state and market economy. The
capital and
largest city is Tirana.
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II
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LAND AND
RESOURCES
|
With a total area of 28,748
sq km (11,100
sq mi), Albania is roughly the size of the state of Massachusetts. The
greatest
distance from north to south is about 345 km (about 215 mi) and from
east to
west about 150 km (about 95 mi). Albania is bordered by the Adriatic Sea
to the
west, Greece to the south, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
(FYROM) to
the east, Serbia to the northeast, and Montenegro to the northwest.
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A
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Natural Regions
|
Albania is a mountainous
country in which about 70
percent of the land lies above 300 m (1,000 ft). Its mountains, which
form a
broad backbone from northwest to southeast, rise abruptly from the
coastal
lowlands to elevations of more than 2,400 m (8,000 ft). In the north are
the
most rugged mountains, where a massive limestone extension of the
Dinaric Alps
reaches inland for 40 km (25 mi) from nearby Montenegro. In the central
uplands
lies Mount Korab, the country’s highest peak, at 2,764 m (9,068 ft).
Strong
erosive forces have created bare rock surfaces, deeply incised valleys,
and a
scarcity of meadowlands in this region. South of the Alps, the uplands
are
lower and more rounded, extending southeastward in a series of plateaus
and
ranges that merge with the Pindus Mountains in northern Greece.
The western coastal region
consists of low hills
and lower reaches of valleys that open onto the coastal plain. This is
Albania’s
most densely populated area and comprises most of the land used for
farming.
Even here a series of flat areas are interrupted by hill country. Most
of the
soils are difficult to farm because of drainage and water-supply
problems. Only
the younger, lighter soils near the many rivers are easily cultivated,
but are
often flooded as well. Albania is subject to occasional earthquakes.
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B
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Rivers and Lakes
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Albania’s longest river
is the Drin, total length 282 km
(175 mi), which originates at two headwaters in Serbia and the FYROM and
flows
through northern Albania. Other major rivers include the Seman, the
Shkumbin,
and the Aóös (Vjöse). Because most of Albania’s rivers flow at high
elevations,
they are usually mountain torrents by the time they reach the coastal
plain. In
the mountains, rivers have cut deep gorges with near-vertical walls as
high as
90 m (300 ft) above the water. The gorges make irrigation difficult, but
are
well suited for the huge dams that give Albania and nearby countries
cheap
hydroelectric power. Along the lower course of the rivers, irrigation is
also
difficult because sediment-laden streams often break out of their beds
and
shift channels. Irrigation is feasible only in valley bottoms. Albania
also
shares three large lakes with neighboring states. Lake Scutari in the
north
lies partly in Montenegro, Lake Ohrid in the east lies partly in the
FYROM,
while Lake Prespa in the southeast lies in Albania, the FYROM, and
Greece.
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Plant and Animal
Life
|
Some 28 percent of Albania
is forested with
mixed stands of willow, poplar, elm, pine, oak, and white beech trees.
Many of
the forests near transportation routes have been heavily logged and some
have
given way to sheep pastures. In these areas, the soil is either washed
or blown
away during the summer drought, and even in humid months the grass grows
sparsely in clumps. Because of heavy grazing by livestock in the summer
and the
summer drought, much of Albania is unfavorable for wildlife. Wolves,
deer, and
boars have been pushed back into the most remote forests. Wild fowl,
however,
are abundant in lowland forests.
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Natural
Resources
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Albania is rich in natural
resources. The southwestern
part of the country is well endowed with natural gas and petroleum. The
northeastern region has large reserves of mineral deposits including
chromium,
copper, iron, and nickel. Large deposits of lignite (a soft, brown coal)
are
found near Tirana, and natural asphalt is mined near Selenicë. For
centuries
the forests have provided fuel in wood and charcoal.
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E
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Climate
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Albania’s climate varies
with topography. The coastal
lowlands have a Mediterranean climate with arid, almost cloudless
summers
featuring high temperatures both day and night. Winters are rainy but
mild, and
in the southern lowlands freezing temperatures are rare. In the
mountains rain
falls much more often in summer, and the northern regions experience
more
humidity than the south. Temperatures may soar in the daytime, but
nights are
much cooler. In winter the mountains, like the lowlands, are subject to
heavy
and frequent thunderstorms, but in the mountains storms are accompanied
by
heavy snow.
The average temperatures
in August, the hottest month,
range from 17° to 31°C (63° to 88°F). In January, the coldest month,
they range
from 2° to 12°C (36° to 54°F). December, the wettest month, has an
average
rainfall of 211 mm (8.3 in) while the driest months, July and August,
receive
only 32 mm (1.3 in) of rain. On the coast annual rainfall averages 1,000
mm (40
in), but it may be as great as 2,500 mm (100 in) in the mountains.
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Environmental
Issues
|
Both the former Communist
government and new
administrations have harvested timber in vast quantities. As a result,
many
forests are degraded, wildlife is threatened, and farms have taken over
land
once forested. The effects of past deforestation, livestock grazing, and
flooding have contributed to a rate of soil erosion that exceeds the
natural
process of new soil production. The extraction of oil and minerals has
also
created environmental problems, contaminating air, soil, and
groundwater,
particularly in central Albania. Public education about conservation,
pollution
controls, and recycling is limited, and the government has focused most
of its
resources on economic growth rather than environmental concerns.
However, in
the early 1990s several environmental interest groups were established,
and the
government created a committee to educate the public and offer solutions
to
environmental problems.
Joining the international
community in its concern over
the degradation of the environment, Albania is party to international
agreements concerning biodiversity, climate change, and wetlands.
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III
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THE PEOPLE OF
ALBANIA
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In 2008 Albania’s population
estimate was
3,619,778, resulting in an average density of 132 persons per sq km (342
per sq
mi). More and more people have left rural areas for urban ones,
particularly in
the northern districts, such that in 2005 some 45 percent of the
population
lived in urban areas, compared to one-fifth in 1950. Albania has had one
of the
highest birth rates in Europe since the end of World War II (1939-1945)
while
the death rate has been one of the continent’s lowest. A high rate of
population growth was state policy under the Communist regime, which
viewed it
as essential to Albania’s strength and prosperity.
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A
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Principal Cities
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Tirana, in the central
region, is the capital and
largest city. Albania’s second largest city, Durrës, lies on the
Adriatic coast
to the west and is by far the country’s largest seaport. Other large
cities
include Elbasan in central eastern Albania, Shkodër in the northwest,
and the
port of Vlorë in the south central region.
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B
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Ethnic Groups
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Albanians are among the
most ancient ethnic groups
in southeastern Europe. Their ancestors, the Illyrians, were an
Indo-European
people who settled in the Balkans long before the Greeks. Modern-day
Albania
consists almost exclusively of ethnic Albanians, who call themselves Shqipetars
(Sons of the Eagle). Only 5 percent of Albania’s residents are of
non-Albanian
heritage, most of whom are Greek.
Albanians are divided
by the Shkumbin River into two
major dialect groups: the Ghegs in the north and the Tosks in the south.
The
Ghegs, who make up two-thirds of Albanians, are less intermarried with
non-Albanians than the Tosks, who throughout history were more often
subjected
to foreign rule and other foreign influences. In the past, the Ghegs
were
organized in clans and the Tosks in a semifeudal society, but the
Communists
largely erased both types of organization. Before World War II the Ghegs
dominated Albanian politics, but after the war many Tosks came to power
because
the new Communist government drew most of its support from Tosks.
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Language
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The official language
of Albania is Albanian. Because
Albanian evolved from the extinct Illyrian language, it is the only
modern
representative of a distinct branch of the Indo-European language
family. Tosks
and Ghegs speak different dialects of Albanian, but both groups can
understand
each other. Tosk became the official standard dialect under the
Communists and
remains so today. See Albanian Language.
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Religion
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With 70 percent of its
population Muslim, Albania
is Europe’s only predominantly Islamic state. Orthodox Christians,
living
mostly in southern Albania, make up 20 percent of the population, and
Roman
Catholics, mainly in the north, make up another 10 percent. Religious
divisions
in Albania are not significant, and religious tolerance is such that
members of
the same family sometimes belong to different religions. Most Muslim
Albanians
are traditional Sunnis (see Sunni Islam), but about one-fourth
belong to
the Bektashi sect, a tolerant, unorthodox order.
The Communist government
outlawed all religions in 1967,
making Albania the world’s first officially atheist country. Places of
worship
were closed, church property was confiscated, religious services were
banned,
and religious practitioners were persecuted. The ban on religion was
lifted in
1990. Many churches and mosques have been rebuilt or reopened, and a
growing
number of people express religious beliefs.
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E
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Education
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Illiteracy in Albania,
which had long been widespread,
was dramatically lowered by the Communists; in 2000 the literacy rate
had
climbed to 85 percent of the adult population. Education is compulsory
for
children between the ages of 6 and 13. In 2002–2003 nearly all
school-age
children attended primary school, but only 81 percent attended secondary
school. Several universities, including the University of Tirana
(founded in
1957), operate in Albania. The Communists encouraged education for
women, and
today enrollment rates for girls are roughly equal to those for boys in
all
levels of schooling.
Under Communist rule,
education was also used to
indoctrinate students with Communist beliefs. Before entering college,
students
were required to work for one year; after finishing their studies,
another year
of work and military training was required. After Communism collapsed,
reforms
removed politics and ideology from schools, although schools continue to
receive large subsidies from the state. Work and military requirements
were
also dropped.
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F
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Way of Life
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Traditional clothing consists
of colorfully embroidered
shirts and dresses and in some regions loose-fitting pants for women.
Traditional clothing was discouraged under the Communists in favor of
inexpensive, modern clothing made by the state. Since the democratic
changes in
government, people have more choice in clothing, particularly in urban
areas.
Traditional costumes are still worn in many rural and upland areas,
especially
among women.
The Communists greatly
expanded housing in rural and
urban areas. Urban homes were owned by the state, consisting chiefly of
apartment blocks with attached cultural and recreational facilities and
state-owned stores. In the countryside dwellings were usually one- or
two-story
family houses, mostly for peasants living on collective farms, and small
apartment blocks for workers on state farms. As a result of
post-Communist
reforms, tenants in small apartments were allowed to own their homes
free of
charge. People who lived in larger dwellings could buy them from the
state for
small fees. Over the next few years, many state properties became
private and a
market for private homes developed. Still, housing construction in the
mid-1990s did not keep pace with the country’s high rates of birth and
migration to cities. As a result, some cities were overcrowded and the
number
of shanty dwellings grew.
The Communists ended much
of the traditional,
male-dominated clan system and guaranteed equal rights to women. Aspects
of the
clan system survived, especially in the highlands, but men there have
considerably less authority today. The legal age for marriage was 18
years old
for both sexes and access to divorce was equalized between spouses.
However,
virtually no birth control was available to women because the state
wanted them
to bear children. Since the democratic reforms, women have become more
organized and established their own associations. Nonetheless, women’s
participation in the country’s political life remains limited.
For recreation, many Albanians
watch television,
play sports such as soccer and volleyball, and walk in the city centers.
Under
Communism, state-subsidized holiday centers were provided for families,
many of
whom traveled to the coast or visited the mountains during the summer.
However,
when the subsidies were removed in 1993, vacations became too expensive
for all
but a few Albanians. Even fewer can afford to visit foreign countries.
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G
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Social Problems
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The standard of living
has improved in Albania
since the collapse of the Communist system, but the gap between rich and
poor
continues to grow. The newly rich are mostly entrepreneurs who have
taken
advantage of growth opportunities, while the newly poor are those who
depended
on the state welfare system and, in the absence of that system, suffer.
Homelessness and hunger are higher now than under the Communists.
Democratic
reforms in the early 1990s also brought a growth in crime, in part
because
controls once exercised by the state and police were lifted. The police
were
quickly restructured and have succeeded in stopping the worst excesses,
but
organized crime continues.
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IV
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CULTURE
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Albania’s distinctive
culture also borrows from the Greeks,
Romans, Byzantines, Turks, Slavs, and Italians, who conquered the
Balkans.
Despite the foreign influences, Albanian culture retains a remarkable
degree of
homogeneity (sameness in composition).
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A
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Literature
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Under Ottoman rule (16th
century to 20th century),
Turkish and Greek Orthodox stories and myths played an important part in
Albanian folklore. Tales were passed down through the generations in the
form
of heroic songs, legends, and epics. This oral tradition helped the
native
language and national identity survive until written texts emerged. The
oldest
known document in the Albanian language dates to 1462. In the late 19th
century, under Ottoman rule, the brothers Naim and Sami Frasheri
developed an
underground Albanian literature by combining linguistic purity and
patriotism.
This nationalist movement inspired many writers in later decades,
including
lyric poet Gjergj Fishta. Another prominent nationalist writer was Fan
Noli, a
Western-educated Orthodox bishop and leader of the country during the
1920s. In
addition to writing books, Noli translated western European books and
poems
into Albanian. Under the Communists, censorship was strict, topics
permissible
for discussion were few, and as a result, the country’s literature was
deadened. After the collapse of one-party rule, literature was freed of
most
censorship, and many books are now published and distributed in the
country.
Perhaps the best-known living Albanian writer is Ismail Kadare, author
of the novel
The General of the Dead Army (1963).
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B
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Art and
Architecture
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Painting in Albania was
strongly influenced by
Byzantine art in the Middle Ages (5th century to 15th century), although
by the
end of the early Renaissance (15th century to 17th century) Italian
influence
was strong. The painting of icons (religious symbols) grew as a
form of
both public, or displayed, art and folk art. The style of icon painting,
created in the mid-18th century, remained virtually unchanged through
the early
20th century. Notable Albanian artists of the 20th century included
Vangjush
Mijo and Androniqi Zenge, both of whom are credited with introducing
Western-style impressionism to Albania in the mid-1930s. Odhise Paskal,
another
20th-century artist, sculpted Albanian heroes. Folk arts today include
clothing
decorated with delicate silver ornaments, wood-crafted items for the
home, and
woolen rugs.
The oldest architectural
monuments in Albania date from
the 1st millennium bc and
were
constructed by the Illyrians. From the middle of the 1st millennium bc through the middle of the
1st
millennium ad, the Greeks
and
Romans who occupied Albania built structures still visible in urban and
rural
landscapes. In the Middle Ages, Christian religious architecture emerged
in
Albania’s Christian north while Islamic and Turkish-style architecture
emerged
in the south. Until the mid-20th century, most Albanian cities were
dominated
by two-story stone residences with tiled roofs. In wooded regions,
houses were
made of boards rather than stone; in coastal regions, they were clay,
adobe or
reed, with coatings of clay. Today, mass-produced Soviet-style housing
predominates in urban and suburban settings while traditional
architecture
predominates in rural and mountainous regions.
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C
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Music and Dance
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Like the literature native
to Albania, Albanian
folk music often contains themes of honor, loyalty, and courage. Styles
range
from the heroic songs of the mountains to the more musically complex lieder
(a type of ballad), which is accompanied by instruments and common in
the
south. The most common traditional instrument is the lahute
(lute),
which is similar to the Slavic gusle. Also in the south, saze
(small
orchestras) composed of four or five instruments play music for folk
dancing on
special occasions. Notable folk musicians of the late 20th century
included
Tefta Tashko, Maria Paluca, and Gjorgjija Filce. Two of the most
distinguished
composers of Albanian music are Kristi Kono and writer, bishop, and
political
leader Fan Noli. Traditional dance is still widely practiced, especially
in
more remote villages. Because of Islamic influences, especially in the
south,
women and men often do not dance together in public.
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D
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Theater and Film
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Theater was neither popular
nor widespread in
Albania before World War I (1914-1918). The first Albanian play, Emma,
was
written in 1887 by an Italo-Albanian, Anton Santori, and dealt with
themes of
the Albanian diaspora (migration to other countries). Instead of
accurately portraying daily life, prewar drama depicted the romantic
patriotism
of the past. Under the Communists, theater became a weapon of
propaganda, and
new theaters and plays with Communist themes were encouraged. The plays,
however, were subjected to more rigorous censorship than written
literature,
thereby crushing much creativity and stunting the growth of a native
theater.
Foreign theater companies were also banned. Nevertheless, a few talented
playwrights, including Loni Papa, emerged in this period. In the
mid-1990s
theater continued to lag behind Albanian literature in its development.
Cinema is also undeveloped.
During the Communist
period, films, like plays, focused on heroics. Popular themes included
the
anti-Turk struggles of folk hero Skenderbeg, Albanian resistance to
assimilation by foreigners, and the clash between tradition and change.
Although
there are fewer political restrictions on film today than in the
Communist era,
a lack of money and technical resources continues to hamper the growth
of
Albanian film.
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Libraries and
Museums
|
Albania is home to many
museums of archaeology;
local, military, and natural history; ethnography (the study of
cultures); and
religious and secular (nonreligious) art. Notable museums in Tirana
include the
National Museum of Archaeology (founded in 1948). Throughout the 20th
century
the holdings of Albania’s libraries grew dramatically. The country’s
largest
library, the National Library (1922) in Tirana, acquired many of its one
million books through Communist confiscation of private libraries. The
library
system at the University of Tirana (1957) also features a large
collection.
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V
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ECONOMY
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Albania emerged from the
Communist era as the
poorest country in Europe. Under the Communists, the state controlled
all economic
activities; private ownership and private enterprise were forbidden.
Because
the state tended to invest in heavy industry, the popular demand for
consumer
goods was neglected. Furthermore, the constitution did not allow other
countries to invest in or aid Albania. On the other hand, there was
little
unemployment since the state guaranteed almost everyone a job.
In the early 1990s Albania’s
new,
democratically elected leaders started a far-reaching program to reform
Albania’s economy. Many state businesses were privatized, key decisions
about
production and demand were taken away from the state, and restrictions
on trade
and foreign investment were lifted. At first, between 1989 and 1992, the
disruption brought by the end of the Communist era and the start of
market
reforms led to a steep economic decline with soaring unemployment and
widespread poverty. However, in 1993 Albania’s gross domestic product
(GDP)
grew by 11 percent; in 1994 by 7 percent; and in 1995 by 6 percent—the
highest
growth in Europe. From 1992 to 1995 inflation dropped from a yearly
average of
226 percent to 7 percent, and by 1995 the state controlled only 40
percent of
the total economy. The rapid growth was due mainly to a recovery in
farming
spurred by rapid privatization and land reforms. In 2006 the GDP was
$9.10
billion, or about $2,868 a person.
Foreign aid, initially
critical during the economic
transformation, has become less important since the recovery in farming.
However, the country still relies on tens of thousands of Albanians
working in
Greece, Italy, and Germany who send hard currency home to support their
families. While living conditions for most Albanians have improved and
consumer
goods and services are more available now than they were under
Communism,
poverty is still extensive. Other problems included a failing
infrastructure,
obsolete machinery, lack of raw materials, a shortage of skilled workers
and
managers, and poor labor discipline.
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A
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Labor
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In 2006 the labor force
numbered 1.4 million
people. Some 42 percent of these workers were women. The largest share
of the
labor force, 58 percent, worked in agriculture; 14 percent worked in
manufacturing, mining, and construction; and the remaining 28 percent
worked in
transportation, communications, trade, public administration, and
various other
services. The unemployment rate, which peaked at 40 percent in 1992,
fell to 15
percent by 1995. However, as more people migrated from the country to
cities,
cities experienced a job shortage. As a result, many of the new city
dwellers
depend on state benefits for survival.
Under the Communist regime,
free labor unions were
outlawed and the ruling party tightly controlled the workplace. During
1991 the
democratic government allowed independent unions to form, the most
important of
which is the Union of Independent Trade Unions of Albania. The former
government-controlled union is now the free Confederation of Albanian
Trade
Unions, to which most state workers belong.
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B
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Agriculture
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Under the Communists,
agriculture was collectivized
(worked by the people collectively) and prices were strictly controlled
by the
government, which oversaw 120 state farms and 420 agricultural
collectives. In
the early decades of Communist rule, large resources were spent on
projects to
reclaim, irrigate, and fertilize farms. About half the labor force
worked in
agriculture, and the country met nearly all food needs from its own
farms, as
it still does today. By the mid-1970s Albania was self-sufficient in
grain
production. Despite the successes, agricultural production was hindered
by lack
of machinery, poor management, lack of incentives for farmers, and the
persistence of traditional farming methods.
A series of land reforms
beginning in 1991
transformed Albanian agriculture. State farms and cooperatives were
taken
apart, almost all cultivated land (21 percent of the country’s total
land area)
was privatized, and peasants were allowed to raise crops and livestock
for
profit. In addition, a free market for farm produce was established, and
steps
were taken to modernize the farm sector. While Albania was almost
totally
dependent on foreign aid for food during the transition years from 1991
to
1993, by 1994 the reforms began to pay off. Production on farms grew by
15
percent that year, and farming grew from about one-third of the GDP in
the
1980s to 23 percent of the GDP in 2005.
Important crops are wheat,
corn, sugar beets,
sunflower seeds, tobacco, fruit, and potatoes. Albanian farmers have
shifted
away from industrial crops like cotton, partly because the country’s
textile
industry is declining. Numbers of livestock, especially cattle, have
grown, as
has the dairy industry. Meat, more affordable than it was under the
Communist
regime, is becoming a more regular part of Albanians’ diets. In the
mid-1990s
about half of Albania’s exports were unprocessed goods, with food and
cattle
occupying a high percentage. However, in many villages mules and donkeys
were
still used for transportation and cattle still pulled farm tools.
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C
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Forestry and
Fishing
|
Forests cover 28 percent
of Albania, mostly with
willow, alder, tamarisk, poplar, oak, maple, hornbeam, lime, elm, beech,
and
conifer. The country’s forests provide wood and fuel, as they have for
centuries.
Since the end of Communist rule, much of Albania’s timber harvesting and
processing has been performed either by privatized businesses once owned
by the
state or by new businesses. The management of forests, however, remains
in
state hands, and in the mid-1990s forests could be cut only for domestic
use.
Despite Albania’s location on the Adriatic Sea, fishing is not a
significant
industry, and domestic markets for freshwater and saltwater food
products are
limited.
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D
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Mining
|
Albania is rich in mineral
resources,
including large reserves of chromium, copper, and iron-nickel. The
country also
has smaller deposits of gold, silver, bauxite, magnesite, and zinc. In
1994
chrome, found at Pogradec in eastern Albania and in the Drin River
valley,
accounted for 18 percent of all Albanian exports and was the country’s
biggest
earner of foreign currency. Albania is the world’s third largest
producer of
chromium and the only country in Europe with significant reserves,
estimated at
more than 33 million metric tons of recoverable ore (5 percent of known
world
deposits).
In 1991 and 1992 mining
production collapsed
and the mining workforce was halved to around 10,000 workers. Labor is
now
concentrated in chrome and copper, where it is believed reserves can
support
production until about 2025. Like the rest of the country’s industry,
mining
suffers from outdated equipment and technology, disruption of production
and
supply lines, and lack of managerial expertise. Moreover, most reserves
lie in deep
deposits in remote and mountainous areas of Albania’s north and east,
making
them more expensive to reach. The government has begun to modernize the
mining
sector, mostly by attracting foreign investment, but investors have not
been
easy to find.
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E
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Manufacturing
|
Between the early 1960s
and the late 1980s Albania
developed a diversified industrial base, but when the Communist period
ended,
almost all manufacturing stopped. Employment in manufacturing dropped
from
325,000 in 1989 to 126,000 in 1993, and industrial output fell by 74
percent
between 1990 and 1994. In 2005 industry (including manufacturing,
mining, and
construction) made up 22 percent of Albania’s GDP. Revival of
manufacturing is
vital for the country’s recovery. The country’s chief manufactured
products
include machinery and equipment, cement, soap, furniture, bricks,
footwear,
textiles, cigarettes, and electronic equipment. A growing percentage of
the
manufacturing sector is owned privately, and the government continues to
encourage privatization. Because manufacturers still rely on obsolete
equipment
and technology, modernization has become a high priority for newly
privatized
firms.
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F
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Energy
|
Because of torrential
rivers well suited for
hydroelectric plants, Albania is largely self-sufficient in energy.
However,
businesses and households use more energy than in the past, and outdated
and
worn-out equipment is hard-pressed to meet the demand. Hydroelectric
plants,
mostly on the Drin, Mat, and Bistricë rivers, yield 95 percent of
the
country’s generating capacity. Albania has moderate oil reserves located
near
the central Albanian town of Berat. Of the estimated 490 million metric
tons of
reserves, about 10 percent has been extracted. The oil is pumped by
pipeline to
a large refinery near Elbasan and to the seaport of Vlorë. Natural gas
is also
extracted and some deposits of lignite are mined in the central and
southern
mountain regions.
|
G
|
Tourism
|
As a result of the government’s
isolationist
policies, Albania had no tourist industry until recently. However, the
country’s Mediterranean coastline and mostly unspoiled mountainous
interior
offer great tourist potential. An estimated 60,000 tourists visited
Albania in
2006. The major tourist destinations include Tirana, the southern
coastal
areas, the northern mountains, and several archaeological sites. Most
tourists
are Albanian emigrants from the West as well as Greeks, Italians,
Germans, and
other western Europeans. The country’s one international airport in
Rinas, near
Tirana, was renovated in the mid-1990s. If tourism continues to grow,
other
facilities, services, and infrastructure will also need improvements.
|
H
|
Foreign Trade
|
In the two decades after
World War II, Albania
traded almost exclusively with other Communist states, mostly in Eastern
Europe. Following a rift with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
(USSR) in
1961, Albania shifted most of its trade to China until 1978, when a rift
ended
relations with China. In the late 1960s Albania renewed some economic
ties with
Western Europe, and after the fall of Communism, Albania conducted most
of its
trade with the European Union (EU). Italy is Albania’s most important
trading
partner, accounting for half of exports and 40 percent of imports. Other
leading purchasers of exports are the Former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia,
Germany, Greece, Turkey, Romania, Bulgaria, and Hungary; sources for
imports
are FYROM, Germany, Turkey, Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Greece.
In the economic decline
following the end of
Communist rule both imports and exports suffered, although by the
mid-1990s
both were again growing, with imports dominant. Exports totaled $596
million in
2004, while imports cost $2.27 billion, leaving Albania with a large
trade
deficit (the difference between exports and imports). Usually, when a
country
like Albania has a large trade deficit, it is cause for economic
concern, but
following Albania’s recession, growing imports were seen as a sign of
economic
recovery. Imports consist mostly of food and automobiles as well as
machinery,
industrial equipment, fertilizers, and consumer goods. Exports are
mostly raw
materials and fuels, including, in order of importance, chrome and
chrome
products, copper, nickel, furs, tobacco, bitumen, electricity, and
petroleum.
About 70 percent of all exports now come from the private sector.
|
I
|
Currency and
Banking
|
Albania’s main monetary
unit is the lek (98.1
leks equal U.S.$1; 2006 average). The central bank and bank of issue is
the
Bank of Albania, located in Tirana. Albania is one of the world’s few
market
economies with no domestic private banks, although there are plans to
privatize
two of the three commercial banks.
|
J
|
Transportation
|
Albania’s archaic transportation
system is one of the
biggest hurdles to economic growth. The country has 18,000 km (11,185
mi) of
roads, which connect most towns and villages; however, the roads are in
desperate need of repair and expansion. Private cars were banned in
Albania
until 1991 when there were only 50,000 registered vehicles (about 15 for
every
1,000 people). Most belonged to the Communist Party elite. By 2002 the
country
had 70 motor vehicles per 1,000 inhabitants, and automobiles had become
the
largest single import. Bicycles are still common and a bus system
operates in
most of the country. In the more remote highlands, mules and donkeys are
used
for transportation. Albania has 447 km (278 mi) of railroad track, much
of it
built in the 1940s. The rail system connects mostly industrial and
mining
centers, is slow and inefficient, and needs a thorough overhaul.
Albania has two main ports,
Durrës and Vlorë.
Durrës, 35 km (22 mi) from Tirana, handles 90 percent of Albania’s
shipping. In
1996 and 1997 Rinas, the country’s only international airport, received a
$30
million renovation. The growth of tourism has led to proposals for a
second
international airport in southern Albania.
|
K
|
Communications
|
During the Communist era,
all publications as well
as television and radio broadcasting were controlled by the state. The
state
appointed editors and journalists, censored information tightly, and
used press
outlets as tools of propaganda. Because of the extreme repression, no
opposition publications appeared until the closing years of Communist
rule.
After 1991 most restrictions were lifted and an independent press began
to
function, although publications are often tied to specific political
parties.
Television and radio remain under state control, but the censorship is
less
severe than during the Communist period. The most important newspapers
include
the dailies Rilindja Demokratike, published by the Democratic
Party; Zeri
I Popullit, once the major newspaper of the state, now published by
the
Socialists; and Republika, published by the Republican Party.
Other
major periodicals include the weekly Drita, the monthly
Nentori, and
the independent, nonpartisan newspaper Koha Jonë.
Albania’s telecommunications
system is inefficient and thinly
spread across the country. In the mid-1990s state-owned Albanian Telecom
began
a major program to upgrade and expand the network. Most households have
radios,
and many have televisions. Only a few thousand people, mostly the newly
emerging business class, have access to computers.
|
VI
|
GOVERNMENT
|
From 1944 to 1991 Albania’s
government was
controlled completely by the Communist Party, known from 1948 as the
Albanian
Party of Labor (APL). The party’s preeminence was assured by the 1976
constitution, which defined the APL as the “sole leading political force
of
state and society” and named Marxism-Leninism as the country’s official
ideology.
Power was effectively consolidated in one man, Enver Hoxha. He was first
secretary, or head, of the party’s Politburo (the policy-making body)
from 1944
until his death in 1985. Hoxha ruled Albania with an iron fist and
stifled any
dissension. The party’s control over society and public institutions,
which was
near-absolute, was reinforced by the Sigurimi, the secret police.
After Hoxha’s death in
1985, Albania began to
emerge from its isolation. Anti-Communist upheavals swept across Eastern
Europe
in 1989, and in 1990 Albania legalized opposition parties. In March
1991, after
an interim constitution was approved, Albania held its first multiparty
elections in nearly 50 years.
In November 1998 voters
approved Albania’s first
post-Communist constitution, which declared the country a parliamentary
republic. The new constitution provides for multiparty elections and
guarantees
freedoms of speech, religion, press, assembly, and organization.
|
A
|
Executive
|
A president serves as
Albania’s head of state and
shares control of the armed forces with the prime minister. The
president is
elected by the parliament, known as the People’s Assembly, to a
five-year term,
and is limited to two terms. The president appoints the prime minister
nominated by the party or coalition of parties that has a majority of
seats in
the Assembly. The Assembly must then approve the appointee. If the
Assembly
fails to approve the president’s appointee three times, the president
dissolves
parliament. The president can return a proposed law to parliament for
review
once, but the law will take effect if a parliamentary majority then
approves
its passage. The prime minister is the head of government and chair of
the
Council of Ministers, or cabinet. The prime minister and Council of
Ministers
are in charge of the country’s economic, social, and cultural affairs.
The
president and prime minister are jointly responsible for foreign
relations and
security affairs.
|
B
|
Legislature
|
The People’s Assembly
consists of a single house with
140 deputies, 15 less than were provided under the interim constitution.
Of the
total number of deputies, 100 are directly elected from districts and
the other
40 are chosen from party lists according to the proportion of votes each
party
or coalition receives. All citizens age 18 and older are eligible to
vote. The
deputies serve four-year terms and the assembly meets in regular session
two
times per year. In addition to passing legislation, the Assembly
approves the
president’s appointment of the prime minister and the prime minister’s
choices
for the Council of Ministers.
|
C
|
Judiciary
|
In 1992 Albania extensively
reorganized its
judiciary. The new court system is headed by the Supreme Court, whose
members
are appointed by the president to nine-year terms with the consent of
the
Assembly. Below the Supreme Court are the appeals courts (one for every
district court) and below the appeals courts, the district courts.
Judges in
appeals and district courts are appointed by the president upon the
recommendations of the Higher Judicial Council, which is headed by the
president and includes the chair of the Supreme Court and the minister
of
justice. A separate constitutional court rules on constitutional matters
and
consists of nine members appointed by the president with the Assembly’s
consent.
|
D
|
Political
Parties
|
The 1991 constitution
formally created a multiparty
system. The Socialist Party, which grew out of the Albanian Party of
Labor
(APL), officially rejected Marxism-Leninism as its guiding ideology and
now
supports gradual market reforms. It is influential in rural areas and
among
older people. The Albanian Democratic Party, which draws strong support
in
urban areas and from young people, advocates a market economy and the
encouragement of foreign assistance and investment. Other parties
include the
Social Democrats; the Unity for Human Rights Party, which represents the
ethnic
Greek minority; and the National Front.
|
E
|
Local Government
|
Albania is divided into
regions (rrethe),
which are subdivided into communes and municipalities. Popularly elected
local
peoples’ councils administer most of the economic, social, and cultural
affairs
of communes and municipalities. The regions are governed by regional
councils.
Each regional council includes the chairperson of each local council
within the
region, delegates from the local districts in proportion to the
percentage of
the region’s population each district represents, and a prefect
appointed by
the Council of Ministers. In 1998 there were 36 regions, subdivided into
310
communes and 43 municipalities.
|
F
|
Social Services
|
Under the Communists,
rudimentary health care was free
for the entire population; however, the health-care system suffered from
outdated equipment, inadequate hospitals, and a severe shortage of
drugs. Under
the new government, all medical services are still offered free of
charge,
although facilities remain below standard.
Under the Communists,
mortality rates dropped sharply
and a number of diseases, including tuberculosis and malaria, were
brought
under control. Roundworm, a parasite, was still widespread in the early
1990s,
particularly among rural children, and pneumonia and diarrhea remained
the
major causes of infant mortality. Incidence of viral hepatitis was also
on the
rise. Between 1990 and 1993, deaths in childbirth were cut in half, in
large
part because abortion was legalized and pregnant women were prohibited
from
working in heavy manual jobs.
Albania’s state social
insurance system covers all
workers free of charge. Women are entitled to 360 days of maternity
leave and
receive 80 percent of their salary while on leave. When workers are on
sick
leave, they are paid between 70 and 100 percent of their salary. Men
retire
between the ages of 55 and 65 years, women between 50 and 60. Pensions
generally equal to 70 percent of the average monthly salary are provided
for
the retired and the disabled.
|
G
|
Defense
|
In 2004 the armed forces
of Albania included
21,500 people. In 2004 the air force had 3,500 members, and the navy had
2,000;
the number of army personnel could not be determined due to civil unrest
that
disrupted national command of troops early in the year. Military service
is
required at the age of 19 and lasts for 12 months.
|
H
|
International
Organizations
|
Since 1991 Albania has
become a member of several
international organizations including the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE); all the bodies of the United Nations (UN)
such as
the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); and
the
International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol). Albania also
gained
membership to the North Atlantic Cooperation Council of the North
Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) and has participated in NATO’s Partnership
for Peace
program.
|
VII
|
HISTORY
|
|
A
|
Early History
|
Present-day Albanians
probably descended from Illyrian people
who lived in the southern Balkans long before Greeks, Romans, and Slavs
migrated to the region. During the 7th and 6th centuries bc, the Greeks established
several
colonies along the Albanian coast, including Epidamnus (present-day
Durrës) and
Apollonia (near present-day Vlorë). By the 3rd century bc the colonies began to
decline and eventually disappeared.
As the Greeks left, the small Illyrian groups that predated them evolved
into
more complex political units, including federations and kingdoms. The
most
important of these kingdoms flourished between the 5th and 2nd centuries
bc.
At the same time, Rome
was developing on the
Italian peninsula, across the Adriatic Sea from Illyria. The Romans saw
Illyria
as a bridgehead for eastern conquests, and in 229 bc, Rome crossed the Adriatic
and attacked. By 168 bc Romans
had established effective
control over Illyria and renamed it the province of Illyricum. Rome
ruled the
region for the next six centuries, but the Illyrians resisted
assimilation and
their distinctive culture and language survived. Nonetheless, Illyrians
gained
significant influence in the Roman armed forces, and several Illyrians
became
Roman emperors, including Aurelian (ad
270-275), Diocletian (284-305), and Constantine the Great (306-337).
Christianity was felt increasingly in Illyricum by the middle of the 1st
century ad, and in 58,
Saint Paul
placed an apostle in charge of Epidamnus. Seats for bishops were later
created
in Apollonia and Scodra (present-day Shkodër).
|
B
|
Byzantine Rule
|
In 395 the Roman Empire
was split into a
western and eastern empire, and the lands of modern Albania became part
of the eastern,
or Byzantine, Empire. Several Illyrians became Byzantine emperors,
including
Justinian I (527-565). By the 5th century Christianity had become the
established religion, and Albanian Christians remained under the
religious
jurisdiction of the Roman pope, despite being subjects of the Byzantine
Empire.
In the 5th century invading Visigoths, Huns, and Ostrogoths devastated
the
region, and between the 6th and 8th centuries Slavic peoples settled in
Illyrian territories. The Slavs assimilated many of the Illyrians in
what is
today Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Serbia. However,
the
southern Illyrian peoples, including those in modern Albania, resisted
assimilation. In 732 Byzantine emperor Leo III detached the Albanian
Church
from Rome and placed it under the patriarch of Constantinople (now
İstanbul).
From the 8th through the
11th century, Illyria
gradually became known as Albania, from the Albanos group that inhabited
central Albania. Scholars have been unable to determine the origins of
the name
Shqiperia (Country of the Eagle), by which present-day Albanians
refer
to their country. Scholars generally agree, however, that the name
Shqiperia
replaced Albania in the 16th century. In the 9th century the Byzantine
Empire’s
power began to weaken as Bulgarian Slavs, followed by Norman Crusaders,
Italian
Angevins, Serbs, and Venetians, invaded the region. After the 10th
century a
feudal system developed in which peasant soldiers who had served
military lords
became serfs on landed estates. At this time some of the region’s
provinces
became virtually independent of Constantinople.
When the Christian church
formally split in 1054
into Eastern and Western churches, southern Albania retained its ties to
the
Eastern, or Orthodox, Church in Constantinople while northern Albania
reverted
to the jurisdiction of the Roman Catholic Church in Rome. During the
Middle
Ages (5th century to 15th century) Albanian cities expanded and commerce
flourished, particularly in the Adriatic region. With urban prosperity
came the
growth of art, culture, and education. The Albanian language survived,
but was
not used in churches, government, or schools; instead, Greek and Latin
remained
the official languages of literature and culture.
|
C
|
Ottoman Conquest
|
The Serb occupation after
1347 under Stefan Dušan
prompted a mass migration of Albanians to Greece. Byzantine rule
disappeared by
the middle of the 14th century, and in 1388 the Ottomans (centered in
what is
now Turkey) invaded Albania. By 1430 the Ottomans had conquered Albania,
but
during the 1440s Gjergj Kastrioti organized the country’s feudal lords
to fight
the Ottomans. Kastrioti, popularly known as Skenderbeg, successfully
resisted
Ottoman control for 25 years with military help from Rome, Naples, and
Venice.
Albanian resistance collapsed after Skenderbeg’s death, and the Ottomans
reoccupied the country by 1506. About one-fourth of the country’s
population
fled to Italy, Sicily, and the Dalmatian coast on the Adriatic.
Skenderbeg’s
name has been invoked throughout Albanian history to inspire national
unity and
independence. Today he is revered as Albania’s greatest hero.
During four centuries
of extensive rule, the Ottomans
failed to control all of Albania. In the highland regions, Ottoman power
was weak,
and the Albanians refused to pay taxes or perform military service. The
Albanians staged several rebellions, partly in defense of their
Christian
faith. At the end of the 16th century, the Ottomans began a policy of Islamicization
(conversion to Islam) as a way of preventing future unrest. By the end
of the
17th century, about two-thirds of the population had converted to Islam,
many
to avoid the heavy tax levied against Christians. The Ottomans also
extended
their control through a feudal-military system, under which military
leaders
who were loyal to the empire received landed estates.
As Ottoman power declined
in the 18th century, the
power of some military lords increased. The Bushati family dominated
most of
northern Albania between 1750 and 1831, while Ali Pasa Tepelene ruled
southern
Albania and northern Greece from 1788 to 1822. These local rulers
created
separate states until they were overthrown by Ottoman sultan Mahmud II. A
number of Albanians also rose to high positions in the Ottoman
government in
the 18th and 19th centuries, with more than two dozen becoming grand
viziers
(prime ministers).
|
D
|
Albanian
Independence
|
During the 19th century,
many of the conquered
peoples in the Balkans increasingly wanted their own nations. In 1878
Albanian
leaders met in the town of Prizren, in Kosovo, where they founded the
League of
Prizren (Albanian League) to promote a free, unified Albania in all
Albanian-populated territories. The league also sought to develop
Albanian
language, education, and culture, and in 1908 Albanian leaders adopted a
national alphabet based on the Latin script. Between 1910 and 1912
Albanian
nationalists waged an armed struggle against the Ottomans, who had
refused to
give Albania autonomy (self-rule). The Ottomans were simultaneously
attacked
and, in 1912, defeated by Serb, Greek, and Bulgarian armies in what was
later
called the First Balkan War (see Balkan Wars). Albania
immediately
proclaimed its independence from the Ottoman Empire. At a conference
following
the war, Britain, Germany, Russia, Austria, France, and Italy
(collectively
known as the Great Powers) agreed to accept Albanian independence, but
because
of strong pressures from Albania’s neighbors, the Great Powers gave the
Albanian-inhabited region of Kosovo to Serbia and much of the Çamëria
region to
Greece. Roughly half the Albanian population was left outside the
country’s
borders. The Great Powers also appointed a German prince, Wilhelm zu
Wied, as
Albania’s ruler, but he was in power only six months before the outbreak
of
World War I. During the war, Austrian, French, Italian, Greek,
Montenegrin, and
Serb armies occupied Albania, and the country lacked any political
leadership.
At the Paris Peace Conference after the war, United States President
Woodrow Wilson
vetoed a plan by Britain, France, and Italy to partition Albania among
its
neighbors. In 1920 Albania was admitted to the newly formed League of
Nations,
thereby gaining international recognition as an independent state.
During the 1920s Albania
was deeply divided between
two political forces. A conservative class of landowners and tribal
leaders led
by Ahmed Bey Zogu wished to maintain the status quo while liberal
intellectuals, politicians, and merchants wanted to modernize Albania.
The
liberals were led by Fan S. Noli, a U.S.-educated bishop of the Orthodox
church. In 1924 a popular revolt against the conservatives forced Zogu
to flee
to Yugoslavia. Noli became prime minister of the new government and set
out to
build a Western-style democracy. Six months later, suffering from
internal
opposition and lacking international support, Noli was overthrown by
Zogu, with
help from Yugoslavia. Zogu reigned for 14 years, first as president
(1925-1928)
and then as King Zog I (1928-1939). Zog’s dictatorial rule was marked by
economic stagnation, although he helped create a modern school system
and made
the country somewhat more stable. Zog failed, however, to resolve the
problem
of land reform, and the peasantry remained impoverished.
During Zog’s reign, Italy
exercised so much
influence over Albania’s affairs that Albania was virtually an Italian
protectorate. In April 1939, shortly before the start of World War II,
Italy
invaded and occupied Albania, sending Zog fleeing to Greece. After Nazi
Germany
defeated Yugoslavia and Greece in 1941, Kosovo and Çamëria were taken
from
those countries and joined to Albania, which remained under Italian
control
until 1943 when German forces took it after the Italian surrender. The
wartime
state disintegrated in November 1944 when the Germans withdrew. Kosovo
was then
returned to Serbia (by then part of Yugoslavia) and Çamëria to Greece.
|
E
|
Communist Rule
|
During the war, nationalists,
monarchists, and
Communists in Albania actively resisted Italian, German, and Albanian
fascism.
The Communists eventually prevailed, seizing Albania in November 1944
with help
from Communists in Yugoslavia. The secretary general (later first
secretary) of
the Communist Party, Enver Hoxha, was installed as the country’s new
leader. Supported
by impoverished peasants and some intellectuals, the party launched a
radical
reform program that destroyed the power of landlords and nationalized
industry,
banks, and commercial properties. In doing so, the Communists
consolidated
their rule and created a state-controlled socialist society. Agriculture
was
collectivized, following the model established in the USSR by Joseph
Stalin,
and by 1967 almost all peasants worked on collective farms. The Hoxha
regime
also gained firm control over the northern highlands and largely
eliminated the
traditional patriarchal clans and tribal leadership. Women gained a more
prominent place in the new order as they achieved legal equality with
men.
Initially, Albania depended
on Yugoslavia for economic
and military aid, but it feared Yugoslav political domination. In 1948,
when
Stalin expelled Yugoslavia from the Communist bloc for ideological
reasons,
Albania backed the Soviet leader. Hoxha also purged Albania’s
pro-Yugoslav
faction, which was headed by Koci Xoxe, Hoxha’s chief rival. However,
when the
USSR and China argued over control of the world Communist movement in
the early
1960s, Albania supported China, which Hoxha viewed as more pure in its
Communism. Hohxa was also disillusioned with other Communist allies,
whom he
accused of abandoning the socialist revolution and seeking accommodation
with
the capitalist West. In 1961 diplomatic ties were broken between Albania
and
the USSR. Soviet aid, credits, and technical assistance, which had
allowed
Albania to create a modern industrial and agricultural base and enjoy a
better
standard of living, were cut off. China took the USSR’s place as
Albania’s main
trading partner and supplier of economic aid.
Until the late 1960s Albania
remained
virtually isolated from the rest of the world. Following the Soviet
invasion of
Czechoslovakia in 1968, Albania sought to protect itself by renewing
ties with
neighboring European states and formally withdrawing from the USSR-led
Warsaw
Pact. During the 1970s Albania’s relations with China became strained by
China’s détente (reconciliation) with the United States. In 1978
China
canceled its trade agreements with, and aid to, Albania. Albania then
pursued
closer economic contacts with Europe, but in terms of political and
social
ties, Albania remained one of the most isolated countries in the world
until
the early 1990s.
Under Hoxha’s rule, political
oppression was
severe. In order to eliminate dissent, all political parties except the
Communist
Party (formally, the Albanian Party of Labor, or APL) were banned, and
the
regime periodically purged potential opponents from the ruling party.
Thousands
were dismissed from their jobs, imprisoned in labor camps, or killed.
The state
tightly controlled and censored all public institutions and
organizations,
including trade unions, the press, cultural associations, women’s and
youth
organizations, and all economic enterprises. The Sigurimi, the state
security
network, monitored the entire population and eliminated any signs of
dissent.
Few foreigners were allowed into Albania, and only the party elite could
travel
abroad. In 1967 all religious bodies were banned, Christian and Muslim
church
property was confiscated, and the country was declared the world’s first
atheist state.
The only signs of opposition
appeared within
the ruling party itself. In 1981 Prime Minister Mehmet Shehu died under
mysterious circumstances; he was suspected of leading a plot to unseat
Hoxha.
In 1983 the Sigurimi executed a number of former party officials. When
Hoxha
died in April 1985, he was replaced as first secretary of the party by
Ramiz
Alia, who tried to preserve the Communist system while introducing
tentative
reforms to revive the declining economy.
|
F
|
Beginnings of
Democracy
|
As Communist rule in Eastern
Europe collapsed
in 1989, some Albanians demanded more far-reaching reforms. The
protesters
included intellectuals, members of the working class, and frustrated
young
people. In response to growing unrest and public protests, Alia restored
religious freedom, cut back the power of the Sigurimi, and adopted some
market
reforms and economic decentralization. In December 1990 the government
endorsed
the creation of independent political parties, thereby ending the
Communist
monopoly on power. The judicial system was reformed with the
reestablishment of
the ministry of justice and the reduction of capital offenses. Albanians
were
also granted the right to foreign travel. Throughout 1990 thousands of
Albanian
citizens tried to flee the country through Western embassies. A
multinational
relief operation arranged for the safe evacuation of more than 5,000
Albanians,
and 20,000 more sailed illegally to Italy in vessels seized at civilian
ports.
Meanwhile, protests in
Albania continued, leading to the
removal of several hard-line Communists from the government and the
party
Politburo. At public demonstrations in early 1991 several protesters
were
reportedly killed by the police. In March a general amnesty for all
political
prisoners was declared, and multiparty elections to the People’s
Assembly took
place the same month. The Communist Party and its allies won 169 of the
250
seats, while the newly formed Democratic Party won 75. The Communist
victory
provoked new public protests in which police killed four people in the
city of
Shkodër.
In April 1991 an interim
constitution was
passed, and the country’s name was changed from the People’s Republic of
Albania to the Republic of Albania. A Communist majority in parliament
elected
Alia to the new post of Albanian president and economist Fatos Nano
became
prime minister. Following a general strike by thousands of workers, the
government resigned and a coalition government was created in June. It
included
Communists, Democrats, Republicans, and Social Democrats. Demonstrations
continued through the summer as protesters demanded the arrest of former
Communist leaders and full freedom for the media. In December 1991 the
coalition government collapsed and an interim administration was
appointed.
New elections were held
in March 1992, giving the
Democrats 92 of the 140 seats in the reorganized People’s Assembly. The
Socialists (the renamed Communists) won 38 seats, the Social Democrats
7, and
the Greek minority Unity Party for Human Rights 2. The Assembly elected
the
leader of the Democratic Party, Sali Berisha, president, and Berisha
appointed
Aleksander Meksi prime minister. Under Berisha, several former Communist
officials, including Alia and Nano, were arrested, tried for corruption
and
abuse of power, and sentenced to long terms. Many observers believed the
trials
were unfair and that Berisha had used them to conveniently get rid of
rivals.
Both Alia and Nano were released within a few years of their
convictions. In
November 1994 the Democrats proposed a new constitution to the voters,
who
rejected it in a national referendum. Opponents said the proposal would
leave
too much power in the hands of the already powerful president. The
president
was also accused of authoritarianism for restricting press freedoms,
persecuting former Communist officials, and controlling the courts.
Government
supporters charged that Socialists were trying to discredit the new
democracy.
Relations with the countries
of the former
Yugoslavia were also tense, particularly over repression of the Albanian
majority in the Serbian province of Kosovo. In 1989 Serbia ended
Kosovo’s
autonomy, and in 1991 the ethnic Albanian leadership in Kosovo declared
the
province independent from Yugoslavia. Although the international
community
never recognized Kosovo’s independence, Albania campaigned on Kosovo’s
behalf
and asked the United Nations (UN) to send monitors to the region. The UN
refused. In the mid-1990s Albania feared that major unrest and a
military
crackdown in Kosovo could lead to a massive outflow of refugees,
destabilizing
the entire Balkan region. Albania also disagreed with the new FYROM over
its
treatment of the large ethnic Albanian minority there. Albania’s leaders
wanted
ethnic Albanians in the FYROM to have more representation in the
government,
and wanted the Albanian language to have equal status with Macedonian.
Nevertheless, the two governments established diplomatic relations.
General elections were
held again in mid-1996, but the
victory by President Sali Berisha’s Democratic Party was tainted by
accusations
of fraud. Opposition parties eventually boycotted the parliament, which
in
early 1997 elected Berisha to another five-year term. Also in early
1997, several
fraudulent investment schemes failed, costing thousands of Albanians
their
savings. Although the government promised to partially reimburse many
investors, the combination of economic disruption and political scandal
prompted Albanians in several cities first to protest, then to riot. By
March a
sporadic rebellion had broken out and several parts of the country
lacked
effective government. The southern part of the country, including the
cities of
Vlorë and Sarandë, was controlled by local militias or armed citizens
defending
themselves against looters.
In order to prevent the
outbreak of an all-out
civil war, President Berisha appointed a Socialist, Bashkim Fano, to
lead an
interim government of national reconciliation. He also agreed to hold
early
general elections in June and pledged to resign if his party lost. The
new
government appealed for an international force to help restore law and
order in
the country. However, the multinational contingent led by an Italian
commander
that arrived in April was only mandated to protect the delivery of
humanitarian
assistance to the most destitute areas of Albania.
The Socialists swept to
power in the June 1997
elections, garnering 65 percent of the vote against the 19 percent drawn
by the
Democrats. Fatos Nano, who had regained control of the Socialist Party
after
his release from prison, was chosen again as prime minister. Berisha
resigned
in July, and the parliament elected another Socialist leader, Rexhep
Mejdani,
as president. The Democrats began a boycott of parliament that lasted
until
March 1998. In August 1997 the government announced that the army and
police
had restored order to Vlorë, and the multinational force left that same
month.
In September 1998 Prime Minister Nano resigned when his coalition could
not
agree on changes in his cabinet. Nano’s resignation followed riots over
the
assassination of a prominent Democrat. Pandeli Majko, another Socialist,
replaced Nano that month.
Relations with the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia
(FRY) worsened in early 1998, when conflict erupted in Kosovo over the
killing
of several Serbian police officers by ethnic Albanian separatists.
Serbian
police and Yugoslav army units attacked Kosovo civilians and battled
members of
the secessionist Kosovo Liberation Army throughout most of 1998 and
early 1999.
In March 1999, after the FRY refused to sign a peace accord for Kosovo,
NATO
began launching air strikes against Yugoslav military targets.
Serbian-led
military forces only intensified their attacks on villages in Kosovo,
forcing
hundreds of thousands to flee. Albania, which had been forced to absorb
refugees from Kosovo throughout 1998, was flooded with them in the weeks
after
the air strikes began. This imposed an enormous burden on the country's
fragile
economy. By early June, when the Yugoslav government finally agreed to
an
international peace plan for Kosovo, the UN estimated that about 444,000
Kosovars had fled to Albania. Under the terms of the plan, an
international
peacekeeping force was posted in Kosovo to help ensure the refugees’
safe
return.
|
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Recent
Developments
|
Majko resigned as prime
minister in October 1999,
after losing a Socialist Party leadership vote. He was succeeded by Ilir
Meta,
a young, reform-minded leader. Meta vowed to continue the policies of
the Majko
government, which included promoting economic growth and pressing for
Albania's
membership in the European Union (EU) and the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO). The Socialists retained their parliamentary
majority after
the June 2001 elections.
Meta abruptly resigned
as prime minister in January 2002
following a bitter clash with Socialist Party leader Fatos Nano that
split the
party. Nano had accused Meta’s government of corruption and demanded
sweeping
changes to the cabinet. Meta’s resignation coincided with a decision of
the
Democratic Party to return to the parliament; the Democrats had refused
to take
their parliamentary seats for seven months, claiming that the June 2001
elections were rigged.
In February 2002 Socialist
Party leaders selected
Majko to succeed Meta as prime minister, and in June the parliament
elected
Alfred Moisiu to replace outgoing president Rexhep Mejdani. Moisiu, a
retired
general and former defense minister, assumed the presidency in July.
Also in
July Nano replaced Majko as prime minister. The installation of a new
cabinet
was intended to end months of division within the ruling Socialist
Party.



