PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Albania
Geography
Area: 28,748 sq. km. (slightly larger than
Maryland).
Major cities: Capital--Tirana (700,000).
Others--Durres (400,000), Shkoder
(81,000), Vlore (72,000).
Terrain: Situated in the southwestern region of
the Balkan Peninsula, Albania is predominantly
mountainous but flat along its coastline with
the Adriatic Sea.
Climate: Mild temperate--cool, wet winters; dry,
hot summers.
People
Population (June 2002 Institute of Statistics
est.): 3,129,000.
Growth rate (2001 est.): -0.88%.
Ethnic groups (2004 Foreign Ministry and
Institute of Statistics est.): Albanian 98.6%,
Greeks 1.17% (Note: The 1989 census, the last
official census to record ethnic data, listed
the ethnic Greek population at 2%; estimates by
the Greek community itself place the number as
high as 10%.), others 0.23% (Vlachs, Roma,
Serbs, Montenegrins, Macedonians, Egyptians, and
Bulgarians).
Religions: Muslim (Sunni and Bektashi) 70%,
Albanian Orthodox 20%, and Roman Catholic
10%. (Greek Orthodox percentages would conform
to the percentage of the ethnic Greek
population.)
Official language: Albanian.
Health (2001 est.): Life expectancy--males
69.01 years; females 74.87 years. Infant
mortality rate--39.99 deaths per 1,000 live
births.
Government
Type: Parliamentary democracy.
Constitution: Adopted by popular referendum
November 28, 1998.
Independence: November 28, 1912 (from the
Ottoman Empire).
Branches: Executive--President (chief of
state), Prime Minister (head of government),
Council of Ministers (cabinet). Legislative--Unicameral
People's Assembly or Kuvendi Popullor--140 seats
(100 members elected by direct popular vote; 40
by proportional vote; all serve 4-year terms).
Judicial--Constitutional Court, Court of
Cassation, multiple district and appeals courts.
Suffrage: Universal at age 18.
Main political parties; Albanian Republican
Party (PR); Albanian Socialist Party (PS);
Democratic Party of Albania (PD); New Democrat
Party (New DP); Socialist Movement for
Integration (LSI); Liberal Democratic Union
Party (PBL); Movement of Legality Party (PLL);
Social Democratic Party (PSD); Unity for Human
Rights Party (PBDNJ).
Economy
Real GDP growth (2003): 7%.
Inflation rate (2003): 2.4%.
Unemployment rate (2003 est.): 15.8%.
Natural resources: Oil, gas, coal, iron, copper
and chrome ores.
GEOGRAPHY
Albania shares a border with Greece to the
south/southeast, Macedonia to the east, and
Serbia and Montenegro (including Kosovo) to the
north and northeast. Eastern Albania lies along
the Adriatic and Ionian Sea coastlines.
Albania's primary seaport is Durres, which
handles 90% of its maritime cargo.
PEOPLE AND HISTORY
Over 90% of Albania's people are ethnic
Albanian, and Albanian is the official language.
Religions include Muslim (Sunni and Bektashi),
Albanian Orthodox, and Roman Catholic.
Scholars believe the Albanian people are
descended from a non-Slavic, non-Turkic group of
tribes known as Illyrians, who arrived in the
Balkans around 2000 BC. Modern Albanians still
distinguish between Ghegs (northern tribes) and
Tosks (southern tribes). After falling under
Roman authority in 165 BC, Albania was
controlled nearly continuously by a succession
of foreign powers until the mid-20th century,
with only brief periods of self-rule.
Following the split of the Roman Empire in
395, the Byzantine Empire established its
control over present-day Albania. In the 11th
century, Byzantine Emperor Alexius I Comnenus
made the first recorded reference to a distinct
area of land known as Albania and to its people.
The Ottoman Empire ruled Albania from
1385-1912. During this time, much of the
population converted to the Islamic faith, and
Albanians also emigrated to Italy, Greece, Egypt
and Turkey. Although its control was briefly
disrupted during the 1443-78 revolt, led by
Albania's national hero, Gjergj Kastrioti
Skenderbeg, the Ottomans eventually reasserted
their dominance.
In the early 20th century, the weakened
Ottoman Empire was no longer able to suppress
Albanian nationalism. The League of Prizren
(1878) promoted the idea of an Albanian
nation-state and established the modern Albanian
alphabet. Following the conclusion of the First
Balkan War, Albanians issued the Vlore
Proclamation of November 28, 1912, declaring
independence. Albania's borders were established
by the Great Powers in 1913. Albania's
territorial integrity was confirmed at the Paris
Peace Conference in 1919, after U.S. President
Woodrow Wilson dismissed a plan by the European
powers to divide Albania among its neighbors.
During the Second World War, Albania was
occupied first by Italy (1939-43) and then by
Germany (1943-44). After the war, Communist
Party leader Enver Hoxha, through a combination
of ruthlessness and strategic alliances, managed
to preserve Albania's territorial integrity
during the next 40 years, but exacted a terrible
price from the population, which was subjected
to purges, shortages, repression of civil and
political rights, a total ban on religious
observance, and increased isolation. Albania
adhered to a strict Stalinist philosophy,
eventually withdrawing from the Warsaw Pact in
1968 and alienating its final remaining ally,
China in 1978.
Following Hoxha's death in 1985 and the
subsequent fall of Communism in 1991, Albanian
society struggled to overcome its historical
isolation and underdevelopment. During the
initial transition period, the Albanian
Government sought closer ties with the West in
order to improve economic conditions and
introduced basic democratic reforms, including a
multi-party system.
In 1992, after the sweeping electoral victory
of the Democratic Party, Sali Berisha became the
first democratically elected President of
Albania. Berisha began a more deliberate program
of economic and democratic reform but progress
on these issues stalled in the mid-1990s, due to
political gridlock. At the same time,
unscrupulous investment companies defrauded
investors all over Albania using pyramid
schemes. In early 1997, several of these pyramid
schemes collapsed, leaving thousands of people
bankrupt, disillusioned, and angry. Armed
revolts broke out across the country, leading to
the near-total collapse of government authority.
During this time, Albania's already inadequate
and antiquated infrastructure suffered
tremendous damage, as people looted public works
for building materials. Weapons depots all over
the country were raided. The anarchy of early
1997 alarmed the world and prompted intensive
international mediation.
Order was restored by a UN Multinational
Protection Force, and an interim national
reconciliation government oversaw the general
elections of June 1997, which returned the
Socialists and their allies to power at the
national level. President Berisha resigned, and
the Socialists elected Rexhep Meidani as
President of the Republic.
During the transitional period of 1997-2002,
a series of short-lived Socialist-led
governments succeeded one another as Albania's
fragile democratic structures were strengthened.
Additional political parties formed, media
outlets expanded, non-governmental organizations
and business associations developed. In 1998,
Albanians ratified a new constitution via
popular referendum, guaranteeing the rule of law
and the protection of fundamental human rights
and religious freedom. Fatos Nano, Chairman of
the Socialist Party, emerged as Prime Minister
in July 2002.
On July 24, 2002, Alfred Moisiu was sworn in
as President of the Republic. A nonpartisan
figure, nominally associated with the Democratic
Party, he was elected as a consensus candidate
of the ruling and opposition parties. The
peaceful transfer of power from President
Meidani to President Moisiu was the result of an
agreement between the parties to engage each
other within established parliamentary
structures. This "truce" ushered in a new period
of political stability in Albania, making
possible significant progress in democratic and
economic reforms, rule of law initiatives, and
the development of Albania's relations with its
neighbors and the U.S.
The “truce” between party leaders began
fraying in summer 2003. Progress on economic and
political reforms suffered noticeably since the
latter half of 2003 because of political
infighting. Nationwide municipal elections were
held in October 2003. Although a significant
improvement over past years, there were still
widespread administrative errors, including
inaccuracies in the voter lists.
The July 3, 2005 general elections were
considered a step in the right direction in
terms of Albania's consolidation of democracy.
The Democratic Party and its allies returned to
power in a decisive victory, pledging to fight
crime and corruption, decrease the size and
scope of government, and promote economic
growth. Their leader, Sali Berisha, was sworn in
as Prime Minister on September 11, 2005.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
The unicameral People's Assembly (Kuvendi
Popullor) consists of 140 seats, 100 of
which are determined by direct popular vote. The
remaining seats are distributed by proportional
representation. All members serve 4-year terms.
The Speaker of Parliament (currently Jozefina
Topalli) has two deputies, along with 13
parliamentary commissions, to legislate Albanian
affairs.
The President is the head of state and
elected by a three-fifths majority vote of all
Assembly members. The President serves a term of
5 years with right to one re-election. Although
the position is largely ceremonial, the
Constitution does give the President authority
to appoint and dismiss some civil servants in
the executive and judicial branches. The current
President's term expires on July 23, 2007.
The Prime Minister is appointed by the
President and approved by a simple majority of
all members of the Assembly. The Prime Minister
serves as the Chairman of the Council of
Ministers (cabinet), which consists of the Prime
Minister, Deputy Prime Minister, and other
ministers. Members of the Council of Ministers
are nominated by the Prime Minister and approved
by the President.
Albania's civil law system is similar to that
of other European countries. The court structure
consists of a Constitutional Court, a Supreme
Court, and multiple appeal and district courts.
The Constitutional Court is comprised of nine
members appointed by the Assembly for one 9-year
term. The Constitutional Court interprets the
Constitution, determines the constitutionality
of laws, and resolves disagreements between
local and federal authorities. The Supreme Court
is the highest court of appeal and consists of
11 members appointed by the President with the
consent of the Assembly for 9-year terms. The
President chairs the High Council of Justice,
which is responsible for appointing and
dismissing other judges. The High Court of
Justice is comprised of 15 members--the
President of the Republic, the Chairman of the
High Court, the Minister of Justice, three
members elected by the Assembly, and nine judges
of all levels elected by the National Judicial
Conference.
The remaining courts are divided into three
jurisdictions: criminal, civil, and military.
There are no jury trials under the Albanian
system of justice. A college of three judges,
who are sometimes referred to as a "jury" by the
Albanian press, render court verdicts.
Principal Government Officials
President--Alfred Moisiu
Prime Minister--Sali Berisha
Deputy Prime Minister--Ilir Rusmajli
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Besnik Mustafaj
ECONOMY
Albania is one of the poorest countries in
Europe. According to the World Bank’s November
2003 Poverty Assessment, average per capita
income was U.S.$1,230 in 2002. The official
unemployment rate is 16%, and 30% of the
population lives below the poverty line.
Two-thirds of all workers are employed in the
agricultural sector, although the construction
and service industries have been expanding
recently, the latter boosted significantly by
ethnic Albanian tourists from other parts of the
Balkans. The GDP is comprised of agriculture
(approx. 34%), industry (approx. 13%), service
sector (approx. 32%), and remittances from
Albanian workers abroad--mostly in Greece and
Italy (approx. 21%).
Albania was the last of the central and
eastern European countries to embark upon
democratic and free market reforms. Further,
Albania started from a comparatively
disadvantaged position, due to Hoxha's
catastrophic economic policies. Transition from
a centrally planned economy to a market
orientated system has almost been as difficult
for Albania as the country's Communist period.
The democratically elected government that
assumed office in April 1992 launched an
ambitious economic reform program meant to halt
economic deterioration and put the country on
the path toward a market economy. Key elements
included price and exchange system
liberalization, fiscal consolidation, monetary
restraint, and a firm income policy. These were
complemented by a comprehensive package of
structural reforms, including privatization,
enterprise and financial sector reform, and
creation of the legal framework for a market
economy and private sector activity.
Results of Albania's efforts were initially
encouraging. Led by the agricultural sector,
real GDP grew, and Albania's currency, the lek,
stabilized. The speed and vigor of private
entrepreneurial response to Albania's opening
and liberalizing was better than expected.
Beginning in 1995, however, progress stalled.
The collapse of the infamous pyramid schemes of
the 1990s and the instability that followed were
a tremendous setback, from which Albania's
economy continues to recover.
Within recent years, the Albanian economy has
improved, although infrastructure development
and major reforms in areas such as tax
collection, property laws, and banking are
proceeding slowly. Between 1998-2002, Albania
experienced an average 6.2% annual growth in
GNP. Fiscal and monetary discipline have kept
inflation relatively low, averaging roughly 4.2%
per year between 2001-2003. Albania’s public
debt reached 67% of GDP in 2002, and the growing
trade deficit was estimated at 22% of GDP in
2002. Economic reform has also been hampered by
Albania’s very large informal economy, which the
IMF estimates equals 50% of GDP.
Albania's trade imbalance is severe. In 2002,
Albanian trade was U.S. $1.8 billion in imports,
and U.S. $350 million in exports. Albania has
concluded Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) with
Macedonia, Croatia, UNMIK (Kosovo), and
Bulgaria. FTAs with Romania, Bosnia, and Moldova
are at various stages of approval. However,
combined trade with all these countries
constitutes a small percentage of Albania's
trade, while trade with EU member states
(notably Greece, Italy, and Turkey) accounts for
nearly 75%.) U.S. two-way trade with Albania is
very low. In 2003, U.S. exports to Albania
totaled $9.7 million making it the 183rd
overall destination for U.S. exports. U.S.
imports, during the same time period, totaled
$4.3 million, making Albania the 177th
overall source of U.S. imports. Major U.S.
investment to date has been limited to
large-scale infrastructure contracts with the
government. The Albanian Government is currently
negotiating a FTA with the EU, as part of its
Stabilization and Association Agreement
negotiations, which, when it comes into force,
could significantly reduce revenue collected.
Albania is assiduously trying to attract
foreign investment and promote domestic
investment, but significant impediments exist.
The Albanian government faces the daunting but
essential task of rationalizing and uniformly
applying business laws, improving transparency
in business procedures, restructuring the
banking and tax systems (including tax
collection), reducing corruption in the
bureaucracy, and resolving property ownership
disputes.
Business growth is further retarded by
Albania's inadequate energy and transportation
infrastructure. The capital, Tirana, generally
receives electricity most of the day, but
constant power outages plague every other major
city, small town and rural village. Although
recent steps have been taken to improve the
transportation infrastructure, Albania has a
limited railway system and few domestic
airports. Because of the mountainous terrain,
goods traveling overland must spend hours
traversing the relatively sparse network of
switchback roads, many of them of poor quality,
to reach destinations that are relatively close.
MILITARY AFFAIRS
Since the fall of Communism in Albania in 1991,
the country has played a constructive role in
resolving several of the inter-ethnic conflicts
in south central Europe, promoting peaceful
dispute resolution and discouraging
ethnic-Albanian extremists. Albania sheltered
many thousands of Kosovar refugees during the
1999 conflict, and now provides logistical
assistance for Kosovo Force (KFOR) troops.
Albania is part of the international
Stabilization Force (SFOR) serving in Bosnia,
and Albanian peacekeepers are part of the
International Security Assistance Force in
Afghanistan and the international stabilization
force in Iraq. Albania has been a steadfast
supporter of U.S. policy in Iraq, and one of
only four nations to contribute troops to the
combat phase of Operation Enduring Freedom.
Albania continues to work with the
international community to restructure its armed
forces and strengthen democratic structures
pursuant to its Membership Action Plan.
At the June 2004 Istanbul Summit,
NATO encouraged Albania to continue making
progress towards membership. Since 1999,
Albania has spent approximately $108 million
annually on military expenditures, roughly 1.35%
of its GDP. With bilateral and multi-lateral
assistance, the Ministry of Defense is
transitioning to a smaller, voluntary,
professional military, and reducing the vast
amounts of excess weaponry and ammunition that
litter the country and pose a significant public
hazard and proliferation risk. The government
continues efforts to collect from civilians the
weapons that were seized during the chaos of
1997. The Albanian government and the
international community are also working towards
making Albania a mine-safe country by 2006. The
heavily mined areas of northeast Albania are a
legacy of the 1999 Kosovo crisis.
In May 2003, Albania and the U.S. signed a
treaty on the Prevention of Proliferation of
Weapons of Mass Destruction and the Promotion of
Defense and Military Relations. In May 2003,
Albania, Croatia, Macedonia, and the U.S.
created the
Adriatic Charter, modeled on the Baltic
Charter, as a mechanism for promoting regional
cooperation to advance each country's NATO
candidacy. Also in March 2004, Albania and the
U.S. signed a Supplementary Agreement to the
Partnership for Peace Status of Forces
Agreement, which defines the status of American
military troops in Albania and further enables
military cooperation.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Albania is currently pursuing a path of greater
Euro-Atlantic integration. Its primary long-term
goals are to gain NATO and EU membership and to
promote closer bilateral ties with its neighbors
and with the U.S. Albania is a member of a
number of international organizations, including
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE), the UN, the Stability Pact, the
Adriatic Charter, and the WTO. In February 2003,
the EU opened negotiations with Albania on a
Stabilization and Association Agreement, with an
initial focus on implementing essential rule of
law reforms and curbing corruption and organized
crime.
Albania maintains generally good relations
with its neighbors, and has or is seeking FTAs
with all the Balkan countries. It re-established
diplomatic relations with the Former Republic of
Yugoslavia following the ousting of Slobodan
Milosevic in 2000. Although the final status of
Kosovo remains a key issue in Albanian-Serbian
relations, both nations are committed to
achieving a peaceful resolution. Albanian,
Macedonian, and Italian law enforcement agencies
are cooperating with increasing efficiency to
crack down on the trafficking of arms, drugs,
contraband, and human beings across their
borders. Albania has also arrested and
prosecuted several ethnic-Albanian extremists on
charges of inciting interethnic hatred in
Macedonia and Kosovo. Tensions occasionally
arise with Greece over the treatment of the
Greek minority in Albania or the Albanian
community in Greece, but overall relations are
good, and Greece is a strong proponent of
Albania's eventual integration into the EU and
NATO. Albania recently upgraded the railway
between the Montenegrin capital, Podgorica, and
Albania's northernmost major city, Shkoder, to
improve trade. Italy, Greece, and Turkey are
Albania's largest trade partners.
U.S.-ALBANIAN RELATIONS
Albania enjoys friendly and cooperative
bilateral relations with the U.S. Pro-U.S.
sentiment is widespread among the population.
Even while the U.S., which had closed its
mission to Albania in 1946, was being vilified
by Communist propaganda during the Hoxha regime,
ordinary Albanians remembered that Woodrow
Wilson had protected Albanian independence in
1919. Albanians credit the NATO bombing of
Serbia in 1999 with saving thousands of Kosovar-Albanian
lives.
In 2003, Albania and the U.S. signed and
ratified a number of agreements, including a
treaty on the Prevention of Proliferation of
Weapons of Mass Destruction and the Promotion of
Defense and Military Relations; the Adriatic
Charter; and an Agreement regarding the
non-surrender of persons to the International
Criminal Court. The U.S. strongly supports
Albania's EU and NATO membership goals. Working
towards NATO membership, the U.S. and Albania
signed a Supplementary Agreement to the
Partnership for Peace Status of Forces
Agreement, an important step in strengthening
bilateral cooperation and enhancing security,
peace, and stability in the region. Since FY
1991, the U.S. has provided more than $531
million in assistance--not counting U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) food aid--to
Albania to facilitate its transition from the
most isolated and repressive communist state in
Europe to a modern democracy with a
market-oriented economy, and to support
long-term development. In 2004, the U.S. gave
over $28 million to Albania under the Support
for East European Democracy (SEED) Act program.
On September 30, 2004, Albania was selected to
participate in the FY 2004 Threshold Program
under the Millennium Challenge Account, which
may help Albania implement programs targeted
toward two critical stumbling blocks to
development--corruption and rule of law.
Despite its daunting problems at home,
Albania has wholeheartedly supported the U.S. in
the global war on terrorism, by freezing
terrorist assets, shutting down suspect Islamic
NGOs, expelling Islamic extremists, and
providing military and diplomatic support for
the U.S.-led actions in Afghanistan and Iraq. On
October 20, 2004 President Bush authorized for
the first time the use of the Nunn-Lugar
Cooperative Threat Reduction program funds
outside the former Soviet Union. Under
Nunn-Lugar the United States plans to assist the
Government of Albania with the destruction of a
stockpile of chemical agents left over from the
communist regime.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--Marcie
B. Ries
Deputy Chief of Mission--Steven E. Zate
Political/Economic Section Chief--Todd D.
Robinson
Political Officers--Rima Koyler, Nigchuan Zhu,
Bernadette Roberts
Economic/Commercial Officer--David Schroeder
Consular Officer--Alma Gurski
USAID Director--Harry Birnholtz
Public Affairs Officer--Roxanne Cabral
Defense Attaché--Cmdr. Shaun Hollenbaugh
Regional Security Officer--S. Wade DeWitt
Management Officer--Richard Morgan
The
U.S. Embassy is located at 103 Tirana Rruga
Elbasanit, Tirana; telephone: [355] (4) 247-285;
facsimile: [355] (4) 232-222.