Albanian Opposition, Police Clash at Anti-government Rally

Thousands of supporters of the Albania’s center-right opposition protested Saturday in Tirana, calling for the left-wing government to resign and for an early parliamentary election. The protesters clashed with police at several points, and reporters saw some people injured.

The protest began in front of the main government building at Tirana’s Martyrs of the Nation Boulevard. Flares, firecrackers, Molotov cocktails and other projectiles were thrown. Police used tear gas when a group of protesters broke the police cordon and headed for the building’s entrance.

After two hours, clashes moved to the parliament building.

Ambulances were seen taking injured protesters away, but there was no immediate information on numbers of casualties among demonstrators.  

Interior Minister Sander Lleshaj said 13 policemen were injured.

Party leader’s release sought

The opposition Democrats’ leader, Lulzim Basha, led protesters to the Tirana police department, asking for the release of a senior party leader taken earlier. 

Minor clashes continued, with some protesters throwing Molotov bombs and projectiles, while police responded with tear gas and water cannons. Masked teenagers were seen setting fires in trash cans on the streets.

President Ilir Meta called on protesters “to avoid acts of violence and confrontation.” 

Lleshaj and Prime Minister Edi Rama both denounced the violence and expressed their support for police forces, deploring their injuries.

​Corruption accusations

The opposition accuses Rama’s Cabinet of being corrupt and linked to organized crime, which the government denies.

Basha called on his supporters to continue the protest until Rama resigns and a transitional cabinet is formed to take the country to an early election. 

“We are determined there will be … no election with Edi Rama,” Basha said.

Rama tweeted that he considered the protest violence as “sadness,” adding that “Albania is damaged.”

The U.S. Embassy in Tirana condemned protesters’ violence, calling for it to stop.

“Protest leaders have a responsibility to encourage calm. We call on all parties to show restraint,” a statement said.

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe said violence was “not the answer. Also, heavy response to violence will not help.” 

Opposition lawmakers relinquished their seats in parliament in protest, though many have now been filled by other opposition candidates. The governing Socialists have 74 seats in the 140-seat parliament.

In June, Albania expects an answer from the European Union on whether full membership negotiations will be launched. Municipal elections are set for the same month. 

Saturday’s protest was the fourth national demonstration since mid-February. Regular, smaller ones have been held weekly across the country.  

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