Tanya Borel" (by way of richard barbrook) on Mon, 28 May 2001 21:17:08 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] C R I S I S W E B N E W S - New report - Albania: State of theNation 2001 |
C R I S I S W E B N E W S -------------------------------------- Friday, 25 May 2001 BALKANS --------------- Albania Needs Help to Tackle Organised Crime TIRANA/BRUSSELS, 25 May 2001: The Albanian government urgently needs funding and technical support to tackle trafficking of drugs, weapons and people across its borders. The Public Order Ministry in Tirana has declared that the biggest danger to Albanian society today lies in the increasing sophistication of organised crime, coupled with endemic corruption. A new report from the International Crisis Group, Albania, State of the Nation, finds that dangerous perceptions are taking root in parts of Albanian society and among state employees that wealth from illegal trafficking can be used for the economic development of the country. The international community can assist Albania by helping to fund, equip and train an EU/Albanian border police force. It should also encourage the Albanian government to set up a National Drugs Centre to co-ordinate an anti-drug strategy and to conduct a public awareness campaign about the real dangers of human trafficking. ICG Balkans Program Director Mark Thompson said, "Young women and girls, especially in rural areas, need to be warned about the dangers of accepting dubious offers of marriage or jobs abroad." They also need to be protected. Anecdotal evidence suggests that in some areas up to 90 per cent of girls have stopped going to school for fear of kidnapping. Albania: State of the Nation also examines Albania s relations with it neighbours, Kosovo, Montenegro, Macedonia and Greece. ICG says the government in Tirana deserves credit for its refusal to back the ethnic Albanian rebels in Macedonia. The government has faced considerable domestic criticism for this decision, as well as for its establishment of relations with the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, which angered many Kosovo Albanians. Mark Thompson said, "Whatever the private long-term aspirations of most Albanians, the Albanian government remains focused on integration into Euro-Atlantic structures and has so far been prepared to weather the criticism of its ethnic kin to ensure regional stability. This should be recognised and supported." ICG argues that greater security attention should be paid to the fund-raising activities of Albanian communities - including those from Kosovo and Macedonia - in the U.S. and Western Europe. In the lead-up to parliamentary elections on 24 June, ICG calls on the Albanian authorities to pay particular attention to electoral procedures in the ethnic Greek districts of southern Albania. Historic friction between the Greek and Albanian-speaking populations has flared over alleged manipulation in local elections last year. ICG s report examines the history of tension in this area which has received little or no attention from the international community. The complete text of the report may be downloaded in pdf format from the ICG website www.crisisweb.org The report is also available in printed form (write to: icgbrussels@crisisweb.org). ------------------------------------- CrisisWeb - http://www.crisisweb.orgl ------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, simply send an email to listcontrol@tmg.co.uk. In the body, write: leave[space]icgbalkans-news[space]<youremailaddress>. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold