Edi Rama is protecting a key political ally from accountability while simultaneously escalating his attacks on the countryβs justice institutions.
@gresahasa
PhD Researcher at the Faculty of Law and the Center for Southeast European Studies (CSEES), University of Graz | Europeanization through Judicial Reform in the Western Balkans (WB6): Albaniaβs Case | 2026 BiEPAG Fellow | Based in Γsterreich π¦πΉ
Edi Rama is protecting a key political ally from accountability while simultaneously escalating his attacks on the countryβs justice institutions.
The Socialist Party of #Albania is officially granting political protection to former Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Energy and Infrastructure Belinda Balluku, opposing the request made by the Special Structure Against Corruption and Organized Crime (SPAK) to arrest her.
π New BiEPAG blog
βοΈ Gresa Hasa
πΉ Corruption Is Terrible, If Youβre Not the One Doing It
Anti-corruption protests in Albania reveal a deeper political rivalry, as opposition actors compete to reclaim legitimacy amid corruption scandals and institutional reshuffling.
Read hereβ¬οΈ
tinyurl.com/5n75zxvr
Thus, ministerial turnover should be understood as nothing but a substitute for structural reform, where responsibility is individualized while the core decision-making structure and authority within the executive remains intact.
His ministers (extensions of Ramaβs authority) operate under the constant anxiety of their replaceability, a dynamic which continues to reinforce vertical loyalty over autonomous political agency throughout his thirteen years in office.
Since assuming office in 2013, Rama has repeatedly reshaped his cabinet before the end of each governing term.
This cabinet reshuffle comes just six months after the old-new-government was formed in the wake of the May 2025 elections.
β¦the Special Structure Against Corruption and Organized Crime (SPAK), whose case has precipitated Ramaβs sustained, months-long public attacks on justice institutions in #Albania.
Edi Rama dismissed seven members of his cabinet today, among them Deputy Prime Minister and former Minister of Energy and Infrastructure Belinda Balluku, a loyalist facing corruption allegations and an arrest request fromβ¦
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He wakes up in the morning and he getsβ¦ ideas! π
www.reuters.com/world/albani...
This is not a βpeople vs. Edi Ramaβ scenario, but rather Berisha protesting the corruption he can personally no longer carry outβright after having been released from house arrest on corruption charges himself. Weβre a serious republic, please do not mistake us otherwise. π
Tirana has recently been covered in tear gas and Molotov cocktails. Foreign media coverage of Sali Berishaβs cartel-party protests has been lazy, to say the least.
Mass protests in #Albania followed corruption allegations that deepened public distrust.
In this interview, Gresa Hasa explains why no political force commands enough trust to unite popular demands for accountability and reform.
Read more: web.civicus.org/Gresa-Hasa
#CIVICUSLens
In my interview with @civicusalliance.bsky.social, I discuss the so-called anti-corruption protests in #Albania, the actors behind them, why they have sparked controversy, and what sets them apart from other anti-corruption protests in the #WB6. ππ»
Thus, the face of this performative anti-corruption rage is a defeated criminal, back on the streets right after serving time on corruption charges himself.
This is not about democracy or the rule of law, but about negotiating power. Berisha and everyone else playing his game aim to project political relevance while being politically irrelevant.
Behind all the molotov cocktails and violence stands a cartel-party desperate to weaponize outrage against corruption while being one of its most notorious symbols.
The Democratic Party of #Albania continues to hijack and co-opt genuine political causes, alienating citizens and most members of civil society, except for those who find tactical cooperation with it temporarily useful for their own narrow political interests.
I gave a long interview about this topic that will be published soon, but all you need to know about the current anti-corruption protests in π¦π± is that they are largely performative & an attempt of the opposition led by former Prime Minister Sali Berisha to launder his legitimacy and return to power.
β¦entangled in such a network. This does not call for moralizing or merely judging the perversity of these abusive transnational elites; it demands political organizing and the dismantling of the core structures that allow such power to operate with impunity.
What the Epstein files reveal is the depth and scale of this criminal enterprise on an international level, spread like a virus across borders, reaching even peripheral countries like the ones in the Balkans or Central Europe, and public figures one would never have imagined beingβ¦
Just a reminder of how spread and deep this evil is. May they all be exposed and rot in jail!
Not all heroes wear capesβ¦ Wait, what?! π
He looks like he gets outfit inspiration from GΓΆbbels. π
My latest article for @biepag.bsky.social looks into the 56th World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland, and the challenges of small countries in the WB6 in navigating power and diplomacy in an era of unstable alliances.
I invite you to take a look! ππ»
This is the most dreadful nonsense I've read all week what is the matter with these joyless cunts
Please, friends. Look on the bright side. And observe how dark itβs getting. π
What is your stance when starvation is used as a weapon of war, when entire communities are terrorized, and when they are subjected to relentless bombardment?
Never Again is not merely a phrase; it is an uncompromising commitment and a responsibility.
What do you do when the Prime Minister of your country shakes hands with a war criminal wanted for genocide and crimes against humanity against innocent civilians?