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1997 Albanian civil unrest

The 1997 Albanian civil unrest was sparked by pyramid scheme failures in Albania soon after its transition to a market economy. The government was toppled and more than 2,000 people were killed.[3][4] Various other sources also describe the violence that ensued as a rebellion, or a rebellion that gradually escalated into a civil war.

1997 Albanian civil unrest

Evacuation of the United States citizens during Operation Silver Wake
Date16 January – 11 August 1997
(6 months, 3 weeks and 5 days)
Location
Result New parliamentary elections[1]
Belligerents

Rebels

  • Armed civilians who lost their properties
  • Albanian Army defectors
  • Salvation Committees

Government

UNSC missions

Commanders and leaders

Sali Berisha (President)
Bashkim Gazidede
(SHIK) Safet Zhulali
Gazmend Braka


Thomas Klestil
Jacques Chirac
Helmut Kohl
Costas Simitis
Oscar Luigi Scalfaro
Emil Constantinescu
José María Aznar
Süleyman Demirel
Bill Clinton
Strength
Unknown 30,000 soldiers
7,000+ peacekeepers
Casualties and losses
2,000[2]–3,800, civilians and members of army, police, and secret police[citation needed]
During the riots in the city of Vlorë, men broke rocks to hurl at police.

By January 1997, Albanian citizens, who had lost a total of $1.2 billion, took their protest to the streets. Beginning in February, thousands of citizens launched daily protests demanding reimbursement by the government, which they believed was profiting from the schemes. On 1 March, Prime Minister Aleksandër Meksi resigned and on 2 March, President Sali Berisha declared a state of emergency.[5]

On 11 March the Socialist Party of Albania won a major victory when its leader, Bashkim Fino, was appointed prime minister. However, the transfer of power did not halt the unrest, and protests spread to northern Albania. Although the government quelled revolts in the north, the ability of the government and military to maintain order began to collapse, especially in the southern half of Albania, which fell under the control of rebels and criminal gangs.[5]

All major population centres were engulfed in demonstrations by 13 March and foreign countries began to evacuate their citizens. These evacuations included Operation Libelle, Operation Silver Wake and Operation Cosmas, by the German, American and Greek militaries respectively.[6] The United Nations Security Council, in Resolution 1101, authorised a force of 7,000 troops on 28 March to direct relief efforts and restore order in Albania. The UN feared the unrest would spread beyond Albania's borders and send refugees throughout Europe. So, the US and NATO provided assistance to the refugees by managing refugee camps, airlifting the displaced populations throughout Europe, and securing the borders.[7] On 15 April, a multi-national peacekeeping force launched Operation Alba which helped restore rule of law in the country by late July.[5]

After the rebellion had ended, some of the weapons looted from Albanian army barracks and stockpiles were acquired by the Kosovo Liberation Army, with many making their way to the ensuing Kosovo War (1998–99).[8][9]

Terminology edit

The period has been asserted as a civil war,[10][11][12] brink of civil war,[13] and a near civil war,[14][15][2] and anarchy,[16] while others claim that it was not.[17]

Causes edit

In 1992, the Democratic Party of Albania won the nation's first free elections and Sali Berisha became president. In the mid-1990s Albania was adopting a market economy, after decades of a planned economy under the People's Socialist Republic of Albania. The rudimentary financial system soon became dominated by Ponzi schemes, and even government officials endorsed a series of pyramid investment funds.

By January 1997, the schemes, many of which were fronts for money laundering and arms trafficking, could no longer make payments, which led to their collapse.[3][18] By then, the number of investors who had been lured by the promise of getting rich quick grew to include two-thirds of Albania's 3 million population.[3][18] It is estimated that close to $1.5 billion was invested in companies offering monthly interest rates ranging from 10%–25%, while the average monthly income in the country was around $80. A significant number of Albanians had sold their homes to invest, and emigrants working in Greece and Italy transferred additional resources to the schemes.[19]

1996 elections edit

On 26 May 1996, general elections were held and the conservative Democratic Party won by a large margin, winning 122 out of 140 seats in Parliament. The voter turnout was 89.1%.[20] However, the opposition Socialists (PS) accused the government of election fraud and rejected the results.[21] They proceeded to leave the ballot-counting process and boycott the parliament. Five months later, local elections were held on 20 October. The Democratic Party won again, but the Socialists rejected this result as well.

Pyramid schemes edit

The pyramid schemes started operations in 1991. Their activity was based on making payments to old investors using money contributed by new investors. The first scheme was that of Hajdin Sejdisë, who later fled to Switzerland with several million dollars. It was followed by "Sudja" of shoe factory worker Maksude Kadëna in 1993, then the "Populli" foundations run by an opposition politician, and "Xhaferri". By the end of 1996 the schemes peaked. The interest rates they offered were very tempting; Sudja offered 100% interest.

The schemes were not criticised immediately because of a banking law adopted in 1994 which, on International Monetary Fund (IMF) advice, contained no provision that the National Bank of Albania act as a supervisor of commercial banks. The IMF changed that advice two years later, after the consequences had become visible. Despite IMF advice to shut down these schemes, the government continued to allow them, often participating in them.[citation needed]

Between 8–16 January 1997 the schemes finally collapsed. On 22 January the government froze the Xhaferri and Populli firms. "Gjallica", another firm, was on the verge of bankruptcy, while "Vefa", which had invested in Albanian hotels, fuel industry and factories, continued as usual.

The first public protests occurred on 16 January in the south of the country. On 19 January, demonstrators protested in capital Tirana over the Sudja scheme. On 24 January the open rebellion de facto began. Thousands of people in the western town of Lushnjë marched on city hall in protest against the government's support of the schemes, and the protest quickly descended into violence. Police forces were subsequently routed and the city hall and the adjoining cinema were burned down.

One day later, on 25 January, leader of the Democratic Party, Tritan Shehu, was sent to Lushnjë to resolve the situation. On his arrival he was captured by protesters and held hostage for several hours at the City Stadium where he was assaulted as well. Albanian Special Forces units intervened to extract Shehu. By the morning of 26 January every government institution in the city had been looted and destroyed, except for the Interior Ministry building, which was protected by the Director of Communications, seven of his engineers, and a guard who refused to abandon his post.[citation needed]

On 26–27 January violence erupted in other southern towns, including the major port city of Vlorë. On 30 January the Forum for Democracy was formed by opposition parties to try and lead the protests. Anger was also directed against President Sali Berisha and the government for allowing the schemes to continue despite IMF advice.[citation needed] As allegations grew that Berisha and others in the government had personally profited from the schemes,[citation needed] many[who?] became convinced that the Democratic Party had to be removed by force. This was especially true in Vlorë.[citation needed]

On 4 February the government began distributing reimbursements of some of the lost money at subsidiaries of the state-owned National Commercial Bank. Rather than quelling the protests, the move backfired as it increased the public's suspicions. A check for $550,000 paid by the "Gjallica" firm on 7 January to the Socialist Party accelerated the firm's collapse. On 5 February Gjallica declared bankruptcy and on 6 February violent protests resumed in Vlorë. On 9 February state police were attacked in Vlorë and a day later, also in the south, a group of 50 Special Forces troops attacked and brutally dispersed protesters.[citation needed]

Hunger strike at the University of Vlora edit

On 20 February 1997, about 50 students at the University of Vlorë began a hunger strike on campus; they demanded the government's resignation and the full return of invested money. On 22 February, the opposition Forum for Democracy declared its support for the strike. Students from the towns of Gjirokastër and Elbasan also came to give their support. They were then brought by the FRESSH (Youth Wing of Socialist Party) activists from Vlorë to capital Tirana. In contrast, the students of University Luigj Gurakuqi in Shkodër did not take part in the protest, and its Students Union declared that although "the students share the pain of the citizens of Vlorë in losing money in pyramid schemes, on the other hand, they think that freedom and democracy, homeland and nation, have a higher price".[citation needed]

On 26 February thousands of people surrounded the building of the university in Vlorë to defend it from a rumored attack by SHIK (Shërbimi Informativ Kombëtar), the national intelligence service. The same day a group of strikers requested more medical help, raising doubts about the doctors near them.[clarification needed] On 27 February in Shkodër, mayor Bahri Borici of the United Right declared his support for the hunger strike.

The next day was a decisive moment in Albanian history—after strengthening their perimeter around the building of the university, the rebel forces, without warning, attacked the SHIK building. In fighting between the rebels and government forces, nine people—six officers and three civilians—were killed. This incident marked the start of a year of violence in southern Albania.[22]

 
Angry protesters throwing stones at government forces

Looting and opening of weapon depots edit

The so-called opening of the depots (Albanian: Hapja e depove) refers to the opening of army's weapons depots on orders of President Berisha in the northern areas of the country, which he justified by the need to protect the population against the violence from the south.

When southern Albanian bases were looted, it was estimated that, on average, every male from the age of ten upwards had at least one firearm and ample ammunition.[23] During the rebellion 656,000 weapons of various types and 1.5 billion rounds of ammunition, 3.5 million hand grenades and one million land mines, were looted from army depots according to UNDP.[24]

At the village of Selitë near Burrel, a town 90 km north of capital Tirana, an explosion occurred at an arms depot on 29 April after a group of villagers broke into the facility.[25] The blast resulted in the deaths of 22 of the 200 village residents, most of the victims coming from the same family.[26]

Treasury robberies edit

The Krrabë Event (Albanian: Ngjarja e Krrabës) was the theft of gold of the Albanian state treasury on 24 April 1997. The treasury, hidden in tunnels near Krrabë outside Tirana, consisted of 340 kg of gold ingots, banknotes, and other items.[27] The perpetrators, who were later tried and received prison sentences, were: Arian Bishqemi (7 years), Blerim Haka (3 years), Pellumb Dalti (6 years), Enver Hyka (8 years) and Ahmet Hyken (4 years).[28]

The Robbery of the Northern State Treasury (Albanian: Grabitja e Thesarit të Veriut) was the theft of approximately $6 million from the Albanian state treasury in Shkodër in March 1997. A group of six people attacked the fortified building of the State Treasury with an antitank weapon. The total amount of money that was inside the building was $8 million, but the robbers only managed to get away with $6 million. The few police still in the city soon arrived at the scene and took control of the remaining assets.

Later, the thieves were seen by several witnesses meeting at the outskirts of Shkodër, where they divided the money between themselves. After the robbery, the police and investigators began investigations in Shkodër. In the spring of 1998, more than a year later, the investigators closed the file and it was given to the police for further investigation. The perpetrators of this crime are still unknown to this day.[citation needed]

International intervention edit

On 28 March the United Nations adopted Resolution 1101 for humanitarian aid to Albania, and on 15 April Operation Alba forces began to arrive, finally withdrawing on 12 August. About 7,000 soldiers in the multinational Italian-led UN mission came to Albania to restore order and rule of law.[29] The first forces were deployed in Durrës. Normality first returned to Tirana. An element of the Operation Alba forces stayed in place, retraining the military to modern standards; this unit was joined from mid-May by members of WEU's Multinational Albanian Police element, doing the same with the police after restructuring the legislative base which caused the problem.

Involved were:

UN resolutions edit

These UNSC resolutions provide the basis for the establishment & execution of the mission (resolution 1101) and its limited extension (resolution 1114).

Evacuation operations edit

During March 1997, several nations launch evacuation missions to evacuate their nationals, embassy personnel and numerous other civilians by air and sea (weblinks see above). Italy carried out a series of different rescue flights and evacuations by sea without giving these actions an overarching operation name.

Peacekeeping edit

As part of a peacekeeping mission based on UN Security Council Resolution 1101, a multinational protection force of more than 7,000 troops was sent to Albania in mid-April. By mid-August 1997, it had largely restored public order and secured new elections under OSCE supervision.[31]

Snap elections edit

During 1997, a referendum on restoring the monarchy was held in Albania on June 29 1997 alongside early parliamentary elections.[32] It was rejected by 66.7% of the voters,[33] while former Crown Prince Leka claimed that 65.7% voted in favour.[34] Meanwhile, the parliamentary election result was an overwhelming victory for the opposition Socialist Party of Albania, which won 100 of the 151 seats, with the voter turnout being 72.6%.[35]

Armed groups edit

Gangs edit

Taking advantage of the difficult situations, criminal groups armed themselves and took control of entire cities. Most leaders had been imprisoned in Greece, but suddenly escaped and returned to Albania. The most famous case is that of Zani Caushi, who escaped from the high-security prison of Larissa in February 1997 and, with a group of friends, established the gang of Çole in Vlora.

In Vlora five gangs were created, but two ruled the city: the gang of Zani and the gang of Gaxhai. Movement in the city started at 10:00, when people gathered in Flag's Square to hear the Committee of Rescue, and ended at 13:00. After that hour the streets were deserted and the only people who moved were gang members. Gangs announced through speakers and flyers that other people were not to go out as there would be fighting.

Each night brought attacks with explosives and shooting, leaving dozens dead. In Berat Altin Dardha's rule was even more severe. In Lushnje Aldo Bare's gang had control. The worst crime that this gang committed was to behead an opponent. Cities ruled by gangs were Vlora, Berat, Tepelena, Memaliaj, Ballshi, Saranda, Gjirokastra, Lushnja, Pogradec, Cerrik and Tropoja.

  • Gang of Çole (Albanian: Banda e Çoles), in Vlora, led by Myrteza Çaushi,[36] known as "Partizan"[37] and "Zani".[38] Named after Çole neighbourhood, in the eastern part of the city, which it controlled.[37] Supported SP.[38]
  • Kakami, in Vlora, led by Fredi Nehbiu. Controlled western district of Babice.[37]
  • Gang of Gaxhai (Albanian: Banda e Gaxhait), in Vlora, led by Gazmend "Gaxhai" Braka. Named after leader. Members were from Cerkovinë, the city of Vlora and other southern cities, and was formed in March 1997 in Vlora. Their main rivals were the Çole. Supported DP.
  • Gang of Muko, in Vlora.
  • Gang of Altin Dardha, in Berat, led by Altin Dardha.
  • Gang of Aldo Bare, in Lushnje, led by Aldo Bare.

Salvation Committees edit

Salvation Committees (also known as People's Committees or the Committee of Public Salvation [Albanian: Komiteti i Shpëtimit Publik]) were organizations created during the unrest. They were established in many regions of the country in order to usurp the functions of the Albanian state.[38][page needed][39] They were most influential in the south, where early in the crisis the local Salvation Committees merged to form the National Salvation Committee and demanded the removal of President Sali Berisha.[40]

Many committees were based on local organisations for the Socialist Party of Albania and saw themselves as protectors of democracy against authoritarian one-man rule. The Albanian government viewed them as similar to Communist-era local party organisations and therefore a potential threat of returning to Communist rule.[39][page needed]

Timeline edit

January edit

 
Money lenders in Vlora
  • 8–16 January:[41] Multiple pyramid schemes fail: "Kamberi", "Cenaj", "Silva", "Malvasia", "Kambo", "Grunjasi", "Dypero", "Bashkimi", "Beno", "Pogoni", "B&G", "Kobuzi", "Arkond", "Adelin", "A.Delon", "Agi", "M.Leka Company", "Global Limited Co.", "Çashku" and "Sudja". City of Vlora hit, as the main center of such schemes. Government froze the assets of "Vefa Holding" and "Gjallica".
  • 15 January:[42] Hundreds gathered at the palace where Maksude Kadëna, owner of "Sudes", lived. Among them were the leaders of the opposition. They confronted the police.
  • 16 January:[43] Maksude Kadëna, owner of "Sude", arrested. The Socialist newspaper "Voice of the People" wrote, "From Tirana to Vlora across the country in revolt", referring to about 6000 vlonjate protests held in the Flag Square.
  • 18 January:[44] An emergency meeting of the Democratic National Council created a parliamentary committee to investigate.
  • 19 January:[45] A protest against "Sudes" held in the Square. Opposition leaders attempted to lead the protest against the government.
  • 20 January:[46] 1500 people gather at bankrupt scheme "People-Xhaferri Democracy" to get their money.
  • 22 January:[47] Trial begins against "charitable donations" (in fact, pyramid schemes) "People's Democracy-Xhaferri" and "People" both directed by people with close ties to Communist State Security (Rrapush Xhaferri and Bashkim Driza). Kërxhaliu, administrator of "Gjallicës", was arrested.
  • 23 January:[48] Police arrested 50 employees of "People" and "Xhaferri". The newspaper "Albania" wrote, "Surely that is the work by Hajdin Sejdia. He left with several million dollars in 1991 but returned unexpectedly in 1996 and began to distribute money to creditors. The truth is that he received $3 million from 'Xhaferri' and 'People' and this led to increased confidence of citizens in these schemes . . . a result of Sejdisë's arrival [was] an increase of some tens of millions of dollars in deposits of citizens to these schemes within 2–3 months. This avoided the premature failure of these schemes."
  • 24 January: Lushnja City Hall and a cinema were burned by demonstrators angry about the arrest of Xhaferri.
  • 25 January:[49] Demonstrators came from villages surrounding Lushnja to burn and destroy any state institution in Lushnje. Tritan Shehu was held hostage for several hours at the City Stadium. City of Lushnje was burned by the crowd led by local SP leaders. Other clashes take place in Elbasan, Memaliaj, Laç, Kuçovë.
  • 26 January:[50] A demonstration of the Socialist Party in downtown Tirana degenerated into a violent clash between police and opposition supporters. Some socialist leaders were injured by police. The opposition destroyed the National History Museum, the Palace of Culture, Et'hem Bey Mosque and the Municipality of South Tiranës. An angry mob burned the city hall. Albpetrol was burned in Patos by terrorist groups.
  • 27 January:[51] An angry crowd burned the hall of Peshkopi and the police station. Four policemen were seriously injured.
  • 29 January:[52] Police arrested 140 people in Berat and 20 in Poliçan for involvement in violent demonstrations and illegal activities.
  • 30 January:[53] The Forum for Democracy was formed by opposition parties, led by Daut Gumeni, Fatos Lubonja from the Albanian Helsinki Committee (AHC was known for anti-Berisha positions) and Kurt Kola, president of the Association of the Politically Persecuted (also indebted to "the people"). Soon this "Forum" began organizing anti-government protests.
  • 31 January:[54] The newspaper Koha Jonë asked the creditors of "Gjallicës" to go to the firm to get money on 6 February. The aim was to promote violent demonstrations at "Gjallica".

February edit

  • 4 February:[55] Partial returns of deposits began based on a government decision. The opposition criticised Democrats for delaying the start of the process. "Forum for Democracy" proposes the creation of a technical government to resolve the crisis.
  • 5 February: The bankrupt firm "Gjallica" was taken over by the former State Security. The cities most affected by the bankruptcy of the firm are Vlora ($145 million U.S.) and Kukes ($16 million U.S.). Protests begin in Vlora.
  • 6 February:[56] Thousands join violent protests in Vlora. Kukes formed a "Committee" with the firm's creditors and is seeking a legal solution to this issue. They seek to become shareholders of this firm. Similar committees established in Gjirokastra and Berat.
  • 7 February:[57] Protesters block road in Memaliaj.
  • 8 February:[58] Continued anti-government protests in Vlora.
  • 9 February:[59] Police station in Vlora attacked by armed crowd, casualties include one dead and one injured. "Forum for Democracy" declares that the only solution of the crisis is through protests against the government.
  • 10 February:[60] Violence continued in the South. DPA headquarters were burned by armed groups. President and government resigned. A group of about 50 Special Forces troops were viciously attacked by a mob of thousands. EuroNews broadcast footage of the police siege. The rebellion spread throughout southern Albania. A state of emergency was proposed in the South.
  • 11 February:[61] Artur Rustemi, the first victim of the rebellion, was buried in Vlora. His funeral turned into an anti-government demonstration that burned ADP headquarters in Vlora. Alarm spread over the lack of bread in the city. The "Forum for Democracy" called for dialogue with President Berisha kuzhtëzuar.
  • 12–15 February:[62] Multiple kidnappings occurred. Schools closed and shops were allowed to sell up to 9 o'clock.
  • 13 February:[63] Kurt Kola was accused as a traitor and collaborator with communist executioners.
  • 14 February:[64] Anti-government protests develop in Fier.
  • 17 February:[65] The Legality Movement condemned the violence and refused dialogue with the "Forum for Democracy." Ministers meet in Tirana.
  • 18 February:[66] President Berisha met with citizens of Lushnja. He promised to do everything to resolve the crisis. The National Front sought resignation of the government.
  • 20 February:[67] Hunger strike began at University Ismail Kamal of Vlora. Approximately 50 students joined the strike and demanded the resignation of the government. Forum for Democracy organised a violent demonstration in Tirana in which five policemen were seriously injured. A group of students met with President Berisha in Vlora and agreed to resolve the crisis peacefully.
  • 22 February: Trial began of leaders of the Gjallicës. Forum for Democracy supported student hunger strike in Vlora.
  • 24 February:[68] Angry crowds attack state institutions in the south.
  • 26 February:[69] As part of the Presidential tour of areas affected by the crisis, Berisha met citizens of Gjirokaster and promised to make all efforts to resolve the crisis. Thousands surrounded University Ismail Kamal to protect against a rumored "attack" by state forces.
  • 28 February:[70] Forty-six students joined a University of Gjirokastra hunger strike. Their demands were similar to those of students in Vlora. Armed crowds attacked and burned a SHIK branch—three agents burned to death in the fire while three others were attacked and killed by the crowd. Three members of the crowd were also killed.

March edit

  • 1 March: The city of Vlora had no functioning government. Vlora was controlled by gangs and traffickers, and mass exodus began. In Lushnje, police were brutally beaten. News of massacre of SHIK officers shook the government. Rebels took control of the Albanian Navy Pasha Liman Base, a state symbol of resistance. The government reacted by declaring a state of emergency and sent more troops to areas around Vlora and the town of Tepelena. In response, rebels set up cannons at the entrance of the city and pointed them towards Tirana. A massive explosion destroyed an arms storage facility.[where?] Himarë was burning, including police buildings in Gjirokastra.
  • 2 March: Alexander Meksi's government resigned after failing to resolve the crisis. The event was celebrated in Vlora and the south by thousands firing AK-47s into the air as a sign of victory. Parliament approved the chief of Gazideden Union to restore order. Immediately Gazidede ordered indefinite closure of schools throughout the country and imposed restrictions on the press and consumer goods. In Kavaja, bastion of PD, over 5000 people voluntarily armed to defend the city from an envisioned attack by armed gangs. Italian news agency ANSA commented: "The whole scenario is emerging as a politico-military strategy and not as a manifestation of spontaneous popular. To gather people in the Flag Square are available for days special machines."
  • 3 March: President Berisha was re-elected with the votes of DP members of the parliament alone. This led to massive riots in southern and central Albania. The remaining warehouses exploded and remaining bands of the military formed committees. The city of Saranda was also captured by rebels, with fighters based out of Vlora arriving by boat and burning every government building in the city, including the library. In Vlora, a local detention facility was broken into and more than 400 guns were seized. Gunmen burned down the Vocational Training Centre in Vlora. Meanwhile, SHIK tried to contain the rebellion to Vlora, Saranda and Delvina to stop it from spreading to the rest of the country. Destruction and killings continued throughout southern Albania. The seven million dollar Vocational Training Centre in Vlora was burned, which had cost the Albanian government. A group of approximately 100-member "Adipetrol" was held responsible and their compound in Gjirokastra was raided. Masked raiders captured a warship and rebels attacked Saranda, where police and government buildings were burned. Criminals engineered a prison break, releasing hundreds of prisoners, seized 400 weapons and set fire to the town library. In Kuçovë, a bread shortage was announced. The army recovered control of Fier and began to disarm the population.
  • 4 March: The Committee of Public Salvation was formed in Vlore, headed by Albert Shyti. This committee began to act as a parallel government. Snipers occupied every building in Vlore and every street put up barricades to prevent attacks by SHIK. The Mifoli Bridge over the River Vjosë was blocked and mined (this bridge—which separated the two parts of Albania—would become a symbol of the rebellion). As students ended their hunger strike, gunmen in Saranda used navy craft to plunder weapons caches. Gangs patrolled the sea using Albanian Navy ships. Outside Saranda one member of SHIK was burnt alive and another was taken hostage, while two others escaped. Fifty soldiers joined the rebels and two Albanian Air Force pilots defected and flew their planes to Italy. The pilots claimed they were ordered to attack civilians. Gazidede's plan to isolate the insurgency in Vlora failed, as it spread across the south. After fierce fighting in Delvina, the rebels forced the army to pull back. In Saranda, the rebels put up roadblocks. In the South, more depots exploded. Rebels placed snipers in mansions, locked the Mifolit bridge and raised barricades to prevent entry of the military and SHIK. In Shkodra, the army capitulated and the hunger strike ended. In Saranda, organised gangs raided an Albanian Navy base and captured thousands of weapons. The Public Salvation Committee of Vlore was formed. It began to act as a parallel government by conducting a "de facto" coup. Its leader was Albert Shyti. The main collaborator of the "Committee" was Myrteza Caushi, known as Zani "The strongman of Vlora". Under the example of Vlora, Shyti created "Salvation Committees" everywhere in Albania. Demonstrators would never have succeeded in overpowering the Vlora police if they had not been armed and organised by local organised crime bosses and former members of the Communist-era secret police (Sigurimi), who saw this as their chance to damage the new political system. Typical of the latter was Albert Shyti, who returned from Greece with a private arsenal and set himself up as the head of the Vlora "Salvation Committees"—a pattern replicated in other towns and cities in southern Albania.
  • 5 March: Warehouses in Memaliaj and other places were blown up. Rebels burned police buildings in these cities. Greek TV "Mega" stated, "Today, armed groups in southern Albania raised the banner of Northern Epirus for the first time. They demand the separation of the southern part from the rest of the country, ranging from Tepelena, thus proclaiming the autonomy of southern Albania. Albania's longstanding problem has been that of North-South autonomy, which is divided along the Shkumbin river."[citation needed]
  • 6 March: President Berisha held a meeting with representatives of political parties to sign a statement, condemning the massive plunder and destruction of military warehouses and calling for surrender of weapons. Six hours later, the SP and DAP leaders denied any responsibility and obligation towards the statement that they had earlier described as a "political success". Greek TV "Sky" News stated, "A few minutes have emerged from the meeting the leaders of armed groups of Saranda, who have decided to attack tonight at Gjirokastra. They will not leave and anxiously await today's popular trial will be done with three prisoners captured in the main square of Sarande, who allegedly attacked SHIK employees and northern ethnics that increases the balance of victims in Vlora."
  • 7 March: The rebels from Saranda, in collaboration with local army forces, entered Gjirokastra and took some Albanian Special Forces troops hostage. The leaders of the revolt in Gjirokastra were members of PAD, Arben Imami (appointed Defence Minister later in 2009) and Ridvan Pëshkëpia. With the fall of Gjirokastra, the entire south of the country was out of government control. Weapons continued to spread across the country. Tirana's Rinas International Airport was attacked by villagers from the surrounding area, and the Agricultural University of Tirana was looted. Albanian Army soldiers defected to rebels in Gjirokastra. Military assets were taken by gangs and the city's military committee. With Gjirokastra in the hands of rebels, the entire south of the country was out of control. Weapons continued to spread. National Rinas Airport was attacked by villagers from the surrounding areas.
  • 8 March: President Berisha organised a meeting with all parties concerned with the creation of the new government. Leaders of the Gjirokastra division were vetëdorëzuar and had taken the lead of rebellion in this city. Gangs kidnapped a number of auxiliary military forces of Tirana and had blocked several tanks and a helicopter. At midnight attack and spoiled milk processing factory in Libohova.
  • 9 March: A Government of National Reconciliation Union was created in Tirana, headed by Gjirokastra mayor Bashkim Fino. The new government called on former army members to contribute to restoring peace and order. President Berisha appeared on VAT in a statement to the nation where he called for "reconciliation, faith, unity and calmness".
  • 10 March: In Gramsh rebels attacked the police building, and took control of Fier's streets. Berat fell into the hands of gangs and became the main centre of rebellion after Vlora. Poliçan, Këlcyra and Skrapari fell. In Kuçovë rebels took control of 19 MiGs. "Vlora Rescue Committee" welcomed the agreement of 9 March. American Foundation for Eastern Europe directed a letter to the Albanian Embassy in America stating, "It's great naivety not understand that the Committee of Vlora and its leaders are inspired by communist mafia-type the KGB." Letters to the conclusion stated: "Mr. Berisha must decide by any means the rule of law, using military force may even". On the evening of 10 March, the U.S. Embassy welcomed the agreement.[citation needed] Unopposed on the battlefield, rebels in the south launched a wave of extraordinary destruction. In Gramsh they attacked a local police station; in Fier they took control of the streets. Berat fell into the hands of gangs and became one of the main centres of rebellion. Poliçan and Këlcyra were taken over by criminal gangs. In Kuçovë rebels took control of 19 Soviet-made MiG combat aircraft. The rebellion spread to the north.
  • 11 March: Birth of the "Committee of the South" that rejected Berisha and the return of lost money. If the Committee proposed the formation of a new state separate from Tirana. Army depots in Kukës were looted and scores of armed looters damaged state institutions. The citizens of Kukes abandon the town for one day due to an announcement that the Serbian army had crossed the border. The revolt spread to the north, the army capitulated everywhere and a huge weapons depot was captured in Shkodra. Prominent organised-crime figures escaped from prison and put together gangs, effectively taking control of many areas. Gangs looted banks, took hostages and robbed businesses. The chaos was complete and the whole country (with the exception of the capital, Tirana) was completely paralysed.
  • 12 March: President Berisha decreed a Government of National Reconciliation. Revolt broke out in the South.
  • 13 March: President Berisha and Prime Minister Fino requested international military assistance. Tirana was on the verge of invasion by the rebels. Curfew was declared. Several hundred volunteers mainly from the North, protected the capital. Berisha experienced what he felt was the most dangerous night of his life. The last to emerge from prison are Fatos Nano and Ramiz Alia. More revolts in the South. In Lezha rebels burned a police building. Ismail Kadare appeared in a message the Albanians in the Voice of America. He stated, "The clock was turned back in Albania's civil war between the nationalists and communists in the years 1943–44". He criticised foreign media and political elite, and calling on his compatriots calm to overcome the crisis. The French news agency Air France Press claimed, "The riots in Albania were a military coup." The United States' Operation Silver Wake evacuation mission for civilians and embassy personnel begins in Tirana.
  • 14 March: Franz Vranitski was appointed to solve the Albanian crisis. The US Ambassador appeared on VAT, stating that its diplomatic mission will not leave and that the American people supported the Albanian people. In Tirana, the population began to disarm. A tobacco plantation and a Coca-Cola factory were attacked. The SHIK chief resigned. Rebels occupied the port of Durrës. The German evacuation mission Operation Libelle for civilians and embassy staff takes place in Tirana. The Greek government evacuates civilians and embassy staff in the port of Durrës during Operation Cosmas despite thousands of gunmen in the port area.
  • 15 March: Rinas airport was recovered by the government. Parliament approved the "Government of National Reconciliation." A "Committee for the Protection of Durres" was formed.
  • 16 March: A massive rally in Tirana called for peace and cooperation. A day of national mourning in honor of victims of the rebellion was decreed. In Fier radioactive material was looted. President Berisha decreed amnesty for 51 prisoners.
  • 17 March: A Presidential decree released Fatos Nano, opposition leader jailed since 1993 on charges of corruption. The President left the country in a U.S. military helicopter. Fatos Nano held a press conference stating his support for the new government.
  • 18 March: A Committee for the Rescue of North and Middle Albania threatened the new government if it recognised the committees of the South. As a result, the government did not recognise any committees.
  • 20 March: The Assembly of Public Salvation Committee demanded the removal of Berisha and proposed the creation of Federation of South. Rinas Airport reopened.
  • 21 March: Greece sought to enter Albanian territory on the pretext of protecting minorities. Berisha requests Turkish military aid. The Turkish government states that if Greek troops entered Albania, then Turkey would immediately invade Greece and capture Athens. The Turkish government demanded that the mistakes made in Bosnia not be repeated in Albania. The head of Gazidede Union, at a hearing in the Albanian Parliament accused anti-Albanian Greek circles, Albanian Socialists, military and criminals. He stated, "The integrity of Albania no longer exists" and "the rebellion was directed towards the destruction of any historic and cultural facility, with long-term goal to eradicate any historical evidence autoktonitetit the Albanians".[citation needed]
  • 22 March: Armed gangs rule Saranda and Gjirokastra under a regime of violence and terror. Dozens of people were killed.
  • 23 March: Control of the Port of Durrës was reestablished. Berat was ruled by gangs. Numerous attacks were attempted attacks with explosives.
  • 25 March: 3 policemen were killed in Vlore.
  • 26 March:The American evacuation of civilians Operation Silver Wake ends and most U.S. Marines return to their ships offshore.
  • 27 March: The Democratic Party claimed that relations between Greek and Albanian peoples had always been excellent and the Greek extremist groups did not represent all Greek people.
 
The Otranto tragedy
  • 28 March: Otranto tragedy. In the Otranto channel, an Albanian ship run by a Vlora gang was rammed and sunk by an Italian naval vessel by mistake. 82 refugees died. A "National Assembly of Committees of the South" was held. Opposition political figures participated. They demanded the President's resignation. They rejected the "Government of National Reconciliation." The leaders of these committees were former exponents of the Enver Hoxha regime. In the village of Levan, the biggest massacre of the affair occurred. 24 people were killed by clashes between roma and a gang. A total of over 110 died. United Nations adopted resolution no. 1101 for humanitarian aid.
  • 29 March: 5 were killed in South and Berat.
  • 30 March: President Berisha and Prime Minister Fino sent condolences to the families of Otranto victims. Albania requested an international investigation of Otranto.
  • 31 March: Proclamation of national mourning in honour of the Otranto victims. Ismail Kadare stated in the Italian media that "it[clarification needed] is shocked by this tragedy and that the authority of government and the President need to resume in place."

April edit

  • 1 April: Leaders of the Democratic Party debated the resignation of Berisha and Shehu. Fino urged the Socialist Party to withdraw from the 28 March agreement with the Committee of the South.
  • 3 April: Police made gains in restoring order in Tirana. Special Forces take control of Berat.
  • 4 April: The U.S. Embassy stated that it would not meet with any Salvation Committee and that the only legitimate institutions are the government and president.
  • 5 April: Armed gangs ruled Pogradec.
  • 7 April: Dozens of people in Fier were wounded and 5 killed, including two children. The Haklaj family led the riots. 3 were killed in Durrës.
  • 8 April: In Gramsh, clashes broke out between local gangs and another from Laçi. The city had become a center of arms sales.
  • 12 April: Leka Zog arrived in Tirana, along with the royal court. Dozens of mentally ill escape from Elbasan.
  • 13 April: Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi visited Vlore with Albanian Zani Çaushi as his bodyguard.
  • 15 April: Operation Alba, an international army of 7000 troops under the direction of Italy, began to arrive in Albania. The first forces deployed in Durrës. Normality returned to Tirana. Held a successful operation to apprehend criminals Gramsh and collecting looted weapons.
  • 17 April: Political parties agreed to hold elections on 29 June.
  • 18 April:[71] A bomb exploded in the courtyard of the University of Elbasan.
  • 19 April: A repository rocket explodes in Gjirokastra. Fino met with Leka Zog.
  • 21 April: Multinational forces deployed in Vlora. Criminal gangs attacked and spoiled the city of Gramsh and terrorized citizens in Çorovodë.
  • 22 April: A bomb exploded near ex local "Flora" in Tirana.
  • 23 April: International forces choose not to work with any "committee of the South."
  • 24 April: Police Station Attacked in Elbasan. Leka Zog visited Vlore.
  • 26 April: Council of Europe demanded the disarmament of "illegal" Salvation Committees. 4 children injured by a bomb in Gjirokastra. In Shpërthehen 35 meters of train tracks were demolished.
  • 28 April: In Lushnje, a crowd of roughly 4,000 gathered to protest. The protest was initiated by the Committee of Public Salvation. Demands included Berisha's resignation, reform of the electoral process, emergency parliamentary elections then scheduled for 2001, and reimbursement of 100% of all financial losses. Leaders of the Committee joined the rally.
  • 29 April: Schools reopened in the North. Vlora continued under the power of the gangs.
  • 30 April: 27 people left dead by the explosion of a weapons depot in Burrel. Three warehouses exploded in Berat.

May edit

  • 4 May: Dozens were killed in Shkodra, Berat, Tirana and Durrës.
  • 10 May: Special Forces struggled with armed gangs in Gramsh. Gramsh Rescue Committee prevented distribution of newspapers in the city.
  • 14 May: Kakavisë attacked the border. Remains blocked the Berat-Lushnje road. A military post was attacked in Berat.
  • 15 May: A warehouse in Gjirokastra exploded, injuring 14 people and killing 4 others. An entire family was killed in Pogradec.
  • 19 May: Violence continued in the south. Killings continued in Vlora. In Memaliaj police and Rescue Committee joined forces against one of the gangs.
  • 21 May: Continued attacks against bridges in Gjirokastra. Violence continued in Saranda, Vlora, Shkodra and Durrës.
  • 23 May: In Cërrik city gangs attacked a Special Forces armored vehicle. 6 Special Forces of the Republican Guard were killed by grenade attacks. 3 others were captured and taken hostage.[72][73][74][75][76][77][78][79][excessive citations]

June edit

  • 17 June: Massacre of Ura Vajgurore.
  • ? June: The Democrat leadership was unable to operate a normal campaign in southern Albania. Their campaign was accompanied by riots in those cities, leaving behind more than 60 people killed.
  • 29 June: Parliamentary elections were held. Socialist Party allies won while the Democrats suffered the biggest loss in their history. Many of the members of the "Salvation Committees" came out for leftist candidates though they promised they would not get a government position without resolving the crisis. On election day a referendum was held over the form of governance. The Republic prevailed over monarchy with 65% of the votes.

July edit

  • 3 July: Pretender to the throne of the abolished monarchy King Leka I organised a demonstration accusing the electoral commission of rigging the results of the referendum in which two thirds of voters rejected the proposed restoration of monarchy. Five people were killed in a clash between demonstrators and police.[citation needed]
  • July: Gangs continued to rule cities with fear and terror. Murders, robberies and trafficking of weapons, people and drugs increased.[citation needed]
  • 24 July: Berisha resigned. He had promised that if the Socialists won he would leave because they could not endure "institutional cohabitation" with them. The national assembly elected Rexhep Meidani as the new president. Massive gunfire in Tirana celebrated Berisha's resignation. Major fighting ended.

August edit

  • 11 August: Operation Alba's military forces left the country.

Casualties edit

According to Christopher Jarvis, there were 2,000 killed.[2] According to Fred C. Abrahams, between March and May 1997 some 1,600 people were killed, most in shootouts between rival gangs.[80] An UNIDIR document claimed more than 2,000 killed in March alone.[81]

Aftermath edit

Damage from the rebellion was estimated at US$200 million dollars and some 3,700 to 5,000 wounded. Lawsuits were filed against the bosses of the rogue firms.[citation needed] Various members of the government, including Safet Zhulali and Agim Shehu, were sentenced in absentia.[citation needed]

In elections in June and July 1997, Berisha and his party were voted out of power, and the leftist coalition headed by the Socialist Party won. The Socialist party elected Rexhep Meidani as President of the Albanian Republic. All UN forces left Albania by 11 August.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "ALBANIA: parliamentary elections Kuvendi Popullor, 1997".
  2. ^ a b c Jarvis 2000.
  3. ^ a b c Jarvis, Christopher (March 2000). "The Rise and Fall of Albania's Pyramid Schemes". Finance & Development: A Quarterly Magazine of the IMF.
  4. ^ . Public Broadcasting Service. Archived from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  5. ^ a b c Pike, John. "Albanian Civil War (1997)". Globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 14 June 2010.
  6. ^ Greek Army. . Archived from the original on 23 December 2007. Retrieved 15 March 2015.
  7. ^ Salehyan, Idean; Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede (April 2006). "Refugees and the Spread of Civil War". International Organization. 60 (02). doi:10.1017/S0020818306060103.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 15 May 2008. Retrieved 17 June 2010. Following the February/March 1997 looting of Albanian Army barracks and depots, weapons became even more readily available. The current price for a Kalashnikov is barely US$300, and the most conservative estimates of Albanians' stocks now start at 25,000 hidden AK assault rifles. Also available are anti-tank weapons, rifle and hand grenades and even small-calibre mortars and anti-aircraft guns.
  9. ^ Robert Bideleux (11 November 1998). "Kosovo's Conflict". History Today.
  10. ^ Pike, John. Albanian Civil War (1997). Global Security. These riots, and the state of anarchy which they caused, are known as the Albanian civil war of 1997
  11. ^ Barjaba, Kosta (2004). Albania's democratic elections, 1991-1997: analyses, documents and data. Edition Sigma. ISBN 978-3-89404-237-0. For a detailed chronological course of events in the Albanian civil war
  12. ^ Adcock, Gene (31 October 2012). CCT-The Eye of the Storm: Volume II – The GWOT Years. Author House. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4772-6997-8. trapped by Albania's civil war
  13. ^ Jusufi 2017.
  14. ^ Florian Bieber; Zidas Daskalovski (2 August 2004). Understanding the War in Kosovo. Routledge. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-135-76155-4. In early 1997 Albanian society was at the brink of collapse and only narrowly escaped civil war when pyramid investment schemes collapsed, taking with them the savings of a majority of the already poor Albanian population
  15. ^ Kodderitzsch, Severin (1 January 1999). Reforms in Albanian Agriculture: Assessing a Sector in Transition. World Bank Publications. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-8213-4429-3. No progress was made in structural reforms. In early 1997, Albania plunged into deep economic crisis. Rioting triggered by the collapse of the pyramid schemes intensified to near civil war, with the government losing control over large parts of the country.
  16. ^ D. Rai*c (25 September 2002). Statehood and the Law of Self-Determination. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. p. 69. ISBN 90-411-1890-X. An example of a situation which features aspects of anarchy rather than civil war is the case of Albania after the outbreak of chaos in 1997.
  17. ^ Anthony Clunies Ross; Petar Sudar (1 January 1998). Albania's Economy in Transition and Turmoil, 1990-97. Ashgate. p. 241. ISBN 978-1-84014-563-2. ...first half of 1997 was not a civil war, its impact on production and trade might well have been similar.
  18. ^ a b . On War article. 27 November 2003. Archived from the original on 4 January 2010. Retrieved 14 June 2010.
  19. ^ [1] 23 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p139
  21. ^ "Kur opozita rrihej barbarisht/ 28 maj 1996, socialistët protestonin për zgjedhjet e manipuluara" (in Albanian). Top-Channel.tv. 28 May 2019. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  22. ^ "Refworld | Albania: Information from 1990 to present on the ShIK (secret police)".
  23. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 January 2014. Retrieved 30 September 2012.
  24. ^ UNDP, Albanian Human Development Report 1998. Tirana: United Nations Development Program, 1999.
  25. ^ "No full confirmation on the number of the victims in Selite - Burrel". Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare. Retrieved 18 October 2013.
  26. ^ "Explosion of army depot in Burrel kills 22". Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare. Retrieved 18 October 2013.
  27. ^ "Vjedhja e thesarit ne tunelet e Krrabes". Info Arkiva. 25 September 2008.
  28. ^ "Rihetime per vjedhjen e arit te Krrabes". Info Arkiva. 25 September 2008.
  29. ^ Alì, Maurizio (2003). L'attività di peacekeeping della Forza Multinazionale di Protezione in Albania (report) (in Italian). Rome, Italy: Università Roma Tre - Facoltà di Scienze Politiche – via HAL.
  30. ^ Dina, Vagena. "Τipana, Αποστολή". eleftherotypia. Archived from the original on 17 February 2013. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
  31. ^ Ettore Greco (7 March 1998). "Delegated Peacekeeping: The Case of Operation Alba" (PDF). Scuola superiore S. Anna Pisa. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
  32. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p133 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  33. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p.137
  34. ^ . Albanian Royal House. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 10 April 2011.
  35. ^ Nohlen & Stöver, p140
  36. ^ OMR 1997, p. 10.
  37. ^ a b c Paul B. Rich (27 July 2016). Warlocks in International Relations. Springer. pp. 115–. ISBN 978-1-349-27688-2.
  38. ^ a b c Arsovska 2015.
  39. ^ a b James, Pettifer (2007). The Albanian question: reshaping the Balkans. Vickers, Miranda. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-0857710246. OCLC 611201452.
  40. ^ Abrahams, Fred (2015). Modern Albania: From Dictatorship to Democracy in Europe. New York: NYU Press. ISBN 978-1479896684.
  41. ^ * Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :13 Janar, 14 Janar , 15 Janar, 16 Janar
  42. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :15 Janar
  43. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :16 Janar
  44. ^ * Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :18 Janar
  45. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :19 Janar
  46. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :20 Janar
  47. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :22 Janar
  48. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :23 Janar
  49. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :25 Janar
  50. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :26 Janar
  51. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :27 Janar
  52. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :29 Janar
  53. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :30 Janar
  54. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :31 Janar
  55. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :4 February
  56. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :6 February
  57. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :7 February
  58. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :8 February
  59. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :9 February
  60. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :10 February
  61. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :11 February
  62. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :12 February, 13 February
    • Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :14 February, 15 February
  63. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :13 February
  64. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :14 February
  65. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :17 February
  66. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :18 February
  67. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :20 February
  68. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :24 February
  69. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :26 February
  70. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :28 February
  71. ^ Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare :18 April
  72. ^ "Albanian Telegraphic Agency (ATA), 97-10-18". Hri.org. 19 October 1997. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  73. ^ . Albanian Times. Archived from the original on 3 September 2011. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  74. ^ . May 2007. Archived from the original on 3 September 2011.
  75. ^ "Agjensia Sot". Sot.com.al. 12 November 2008. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  76. ^ "Procesi, Met Bozi rrëzon dëshminë e gardistit të plagosur Albania 2010-05-12". Lajme.shqiperia.com. 12 May 2010. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  77. ^ [2][dead link]
  78. ^ "I penduari: Ju tregoj masakren e Cerrikut". Tiranachat.net. 28 January 2009. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  79. ^ "Masakra e Cërrikut, Ish-gardisti: "Met Bozi urdhëroi djegien e kufomave" Albania 2010-06-02". Lajme.shqiperia.com. 2 June 2010. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  80. ^ Abrahams 2016, p. 219.
  81. ^ Mugumya 2005, p. 34.

Sources edit

  • Tripodi, Paolo (2016). "The Collapse of Albania". In Rich, Paul B. (ed.). Warlords in International Relations. Springer. ISBN 978-1-349-27688-2.
  • Abrahams, Fred C. (2016). Modern Albania: From Dictatorship to Democracy in Europe. NYU Press. ISBN 978-1-4798-3809-7.
  • Arsovska, Jana (2015). Decoding Albanian Organized Crime: Culture, Politics, and Globalization. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520282803.
  • Mugumya, Geofrey (2005). From Exchanging Weapons for Development to Security Sector Reform in Albania: Gaps and Grey Areas in Weapon Collection Programmes Assessed by Local People. United Nations Publications UNIDIR. ISBN 978-92-9045-173-0.
  • Daniel Vaughan-Whitehead (1999). Albania in Crisis: The Predictable Fall of the Shining Star. Edward Elgar. ISBN 978-1-84064-070-0.
  • Transition. Vol. 4. Open Media Research Institute. 1997.
  • Rënia e Demokracisë”, Afrim Krasniqi, 1998, Eurorilindja
  • Unë e pashë kush e dogji Vlorën”, Gëzim Zilja, 2000, Pelioni
  • Fondi Monetar Ndërkombëtar, Ngritja dhe rënia e piramidave shqiptare
  • Impakti i piramidave në Shqipëri
  • Banka Botërore, Shqipëria nën hijen e skemave piramidale

Further reading edit

  • Jusufi, I. (2017). "Albania's Transformation since 1997: Successes and Failures". HRCAK. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Andrea De Guttry; Fabrizio Pagani (1999). La Crisi albanese del 1997: l'azione dell'Italia e delle organizzazioni internazionali : verso un nuovo modello di gestione delle crisi?. F. Angeli. ISBN 978-88-464-1454-0.
  • Perlmutter, T., 1998. The politics of proximity: The Italian response to the Albanian crisis. International Migration Review, pp. 203–222.
  • Schmidt, F., 1998. Upheaval in Albania. Current History, 97, p. 127.
  • Kalra, M.S., 1998. Inflation and money demand in Albania (No. 98-101). International Monetary Fund.
  • Miall, H., 1997. The OSCE role in Albania: A Success for Conflict Prevention. Helsinki Monitor, 8, p. 74.
  • Nicholson, B., 1999. The beginning of the end of a rebellion: southern Albania, May–June 1997. East European Politics and Societies, 13(3), pp. 543–565.
  • Kritsiotis, D., 1999. Security Council Resolution 1101 (1997) and the Multinational Protection Force of Operation Alba in Albania. Leiden Journal of International Law, 12(3), pp. 511–547.
  • Jarvis, 1999, "The Rise and Fall of the Pyramid Schemes in Albania," IMF Working Paper 99/98 (International Monetary Fund: Washington)
    • Jarvis, C., March 2000. The rise and fall of the pyramid schemes in Albania. Finance & Development, 37(1).
  • Foster, E., 1998. Ad Hoc in Albania: Did Europe Fail? A Rejoinder. Security Dialogue, 29(2), pp. 213–217.
  • "Modern Albania: From Dictatorship to Democracy", Fred C. Abrahams, 2015, NYU Press
  • "False Apocalypse: From Stalinism to Capitalism", Fatos Lubonja, 2014, Istros Books
  • "Rënia e Demokracisë", Afrim Krasniqi, 1998, Eurorilindja (in Albanian)
  • "Shqipëria jashtë Veriut and Jugut", Ibrahim Kelmendi, 1997, Zëri i Kosovës (in Albanian)
  • "Unë e pashë kush e dogji Vlorën", Gëzim Zilja, 2000, Pelioni (in Albanian)
  • "Skaner 1997", Gëzim Zilja (in Albanian)
  • "Kryengritje e tradhtuar", Panajot Barka (in Albanian)
  • "Lufta jo civile", Preç Zogaj (in Albanian)
  • "Humnerë ‘97", Bashkim Fino (in Albanian)
  • "Viti ‘97, Prapaskenat e krizës që rrënuan shtetin", Mero Baze, 2010, Toena (in Albanian)

External links edit

  • Albanian Civil War (1997) - GlobalSecurity.org
  • AP Video Archive on 1997 in Albania
  • Documentary of Cerrik Massacre with footage of hostage officers
  • Met Bozi in court
  • The Pyramid Scheme that Collapsed a Nation

1997, albanian, civil, unrest, sparked, pyramid, scheme, failures, albania, soon, after, transition, market, economy, government, toppled, more, than, people, were, killed, various, other, sources, also, describe, violence, that, ensued, rebellion, rebellion, . The 1997 Albanian civil unrest was sparked by pyramid scheme failures in Albania soon after its transition to a market economy The government was toppled and more than 2 000 people were killed 3 4 Various other sources also describe the violence that ensued as a rebellion or a rebellion that gradually escalated into a civil war 1997 Albanian civil unrestEvacuation of the United States citizens during Operation Silver WakeDate16 January 11 August 1997 6 months 3 weeks and 5 days LocationAlbaniaResultNew parliamentary elections 1 BelligerentsRebels Armed civilians who lost their properties Albanian Army defectors Salvation CommitteesMonarchistsGovernment Democratic Party SHIK Part of the Albanian Police Republican GuardUNSC missions Austria France Germany Greece Italy Romania Spain Turkey United StatesCommanders and leadersSali Berisha President Bashkim Gazidede SHIK Safet Zhulali Gazmend Braka Thomas Klestil Jacques Chirac Helmut Kohl Costas Simitis Oscar Luigi Scalfaro Emil Constantinescu Jose Maria Aznar Suleyman Demirel Bill ClintonStrengthUnknown30 000 soldiers7 000 peacekeepersCasualties and losses2 000 2 3 800 civilians and members of army police and secret police citation needed During the riots in the city of Vlore men broke rocks to hurl at police By January 1997 Albanian citizens who had lost a total of 1 2 billion took their protest to the streets Beginning in February thousands of citizens launched daily protests demanding reimbursement by the government which they believed was profiting from the schemes On 1 March Prime Minister Aleksander Meksi resigned and on 2 March President Sali Berisha declared a state of emergency 5 On 11 March the Socialist Party of Albania won a major victory when its leader Bashkim Fino was appointed prime minister However the transfer of power did not halt the unrest and protests spread to northern Albania Although the government quelled revolts in the north the ability of the government and military to maintain order began to collapse especially in the southern half of Albania which fell under the control of rebels and criminal gangs 5 All major population centres were engulfed in demonstrations by 13 March and foreign countries began to evacuate their citizens These evacuations included Operation Libelle Operation Silver Wake and Operation Cosmas by the German American and Greek militaries respectively 6 The United Nations Security Council in Resolution 1101 authorised a force of 7 000 troops on 28 March to direct relief efforts and restore order in Albania The UN feared the unrest would spread beyond Albania s borders and send refugees throughout Europe So the US and NATO provided assistance to the refugees by managing refugee camps airlifting the displaced populations throughout Europe and securing the borders 7 On 15 April a multi national peacekeeping force launched Operation Alba which helped restore rule of law in the country by late July 5 After the rebellion had ended some of the weapons looted from Albanian army barracks and stockpiles were acquired by the Kosovo Liberation Army with many making their way to the ensuing Kosovo War 1998 99 8 9 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Causes 2 1 1996 elections 2 2 Pyramid schemes 3 Hunger strike at the University of Vlora 4 Looting and opening of weapon depots 5 Treasury robberies 6 International intervention 6 1 UN resolutions 6 2 Evacuation operations 6 3 Peacekeeping 7 Snap elections 8 Armed groups 8 1 Gangs 8 2 Salvation Committees 9 Timeline 9 1 January 9 2 February 9 3 March 9 4 April 9 5 May 9 6 June 9 7 July 9 8 August 10 Casualties 11 Aftermath 12 See also 13 References 14 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksTerminology editThe period has been asserted as a civil war 10 11 12 brink of civil war 13 and a near civil war 14 15 2 and anarchy 16 while others claim that it was not 17 Causes editIn 1992 the Democratic Party of Albania won the nation s first free elections and Sali Berisha became president In the mid 1990s Albania was adopting a market economy after decades of a planned economy under the People s Socialist Republic of Albania The rudimentary financial system soon became dominated by Ponzi schemes and even government officials endorsed a series of pyramid investment funds By January 1997 the schemes many of which were fronts for money laundering and arms trafficking could no longer make payments which led to their collapse 3 18 By then the number of investors who had been lured by the promise of getting rich quick grew to include two thirds of Albania s 3 million population 3 18 It is estimated that close to 1 5 billion was invested in companies offering monthly interest rates ranging from 10 25 while the average monthly income in the country was around 80 A significant number of Albanians had sold their homes to invest and emigrants working in Greece and Italy transferred additional resources to the schemes 19 1996 elections edit Main article 1996 Albanian parliamentary election On 26 May 1996 general elections were held and the conservative Democratic Party won by a large margin winning 122 out of 140 seats in Parliament The voter turnout was 89 1 20 However the opposition Socialists PS accused the government of election fraud and rejected the results 21 They proceeded to leave the ballot counting process and boycott the parliament Five months later local elections were held on 20 October The Democratic Party won again but the Socialists rejected this result as well Pyramid schemes edit Main article Pyramid schemes in Albania This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The pyramid schemes started operations in 1991 Their activity was based on making payments to old investors using money contributed by new investors The first scheme was that of Hajdin Sejdise who later fled to Switzerland with several million dollars It was followed by Sudja of shoe factory worker Maksude Kadena in 1993 then the Populli foundations run by an opposition politician and Xhaferri By the end of 1996 the schemes peaked The interest rates they offered were very tempting Sudja offered 100 interest The schemes were not criticised immediately because of a banking law adopted in 1994 which on International Monetary Fund IMF advice contained no provision that the National Bank of Albania act as a supervisor of commercial banks The IMF changed that advice two years later after the consequences had become visible Despite IMF advice to shut down these schemes the government continued to allow them often participating in them citation needed Between 8 16 January 1997 the schemes finally collapsed On 22 January the government froze the Xhaferri and Populli firms Gjallica another firm was on the verge of bankruptcy while Vefa which had invested in Albanian hotels fuel industry and factories continued as usual The first public protests occurred on 16 January in the south of the country On 19 January demonstrators protested in capital Tirana over the Sudja scheme On 24 January the open rebellion de facto began Thousands of people in the western town of Lushnje marched on city hall in protest against the government s support of the schemes and the protest quickly descended into violence Police forces were subsequently routed and the city hall and the adjoining cinema were burned down One day later on 25 January leader of the Democratic Party Tritan Shehu was sent to Lushnje to resolve the situation On his arrival he was captured by protesters and held hostage for several hours at the City Stadium where he was assaulted as well Albanian Special Forces units intervened to extract Shehu By the morning of 26 January every government institution in the city had been looted and destroyed except for the Interior Ministry building which was protected by the Director of Communications seven of his engineers and a guard who refused to abandon his post citation needed On 26 27 January violence erupted in other southern towns including the major port city of Vlore On 30 January the Forum for Democracy was formed by opposition parties to try and lead the protests Anger was also directed against President Sali Berisha and the government for allowing the schemes to continue despite IMF advice citation needed As allegations grew that Berisha and others in the government had personally profited from the schemes citation needed many who became convinced that the Democratic Party had to be removed by force This was especially true in Vlore citation needed On 4 February the government began distributing reimbursements of some of the lost money at subsidiaries of the state owned National Commercial Bank Rather than quelling the protests the move backfired as it increased the public s suspicions A check for 550 000 paid by the Gjallica firm on 7 January to the Socialist Party accelerated the firm s collapse On 5 February Gjallica declared bankruptcy and on 6 February violent protests resumed in Vlore On 9 February state police were attacked in Vlore and a day later also in the south a group of 50 Special Forces troops attacked and brutally dispersed protesters citation needed Hunger strike at the University of Vlora editOn 20 February 1997 about 50 students at the University of Vlore began a hunger strike on campus they demanded the government s resignation and the full return of invested money On 22 February the opposition Forum for Democracy declared its support for the strike Students from the towns of Gjirokaster and Elbasan also came to give their support They were then brought by the FRESSH Youth Wing of Socialist Party activists from Vlore to capital Tirana In contrast the students of University Luigj Gurakuqi in Shkoder did not take part in the protest and its Students Union declared that although the students share the pain of the citizens of Vlore in losing money in pyramid schemes on the other hand they think that freedom and democracy homeland and nation have a higher price citation needed On 26 February thousands of people surrounded the building of the university in Vlore to defend it from a rumored attack by SHIK Sherbimi Informativ Kombetar the national intelligence service The same day a group of strikers requested more medical help raising doubts about the doctors near them clarification needed On 27 February in Shkoder mayor Bahri Borici of the United Right declared his support for the hunger strike The next day was a decisive moment in Albanian history after strengthening their perimeter around the building of the university the rebel forces without warning attacked the SHIK building In fighting between the rebels and government forces nine people six officers and three civilians were killed This incident marked the start of a year of violence in southern Albania 22 nbsp Angry protesters throwing stones at government forcesLooting and opening of weapon depots editThe so called opening of the depots Albanian Hapja e depove refers to the opening of army s weapons depots on orders of President Berisha in the northern areas of the country which he justified by the need to protect the population against the violence from the south When southern Albanian bases were looted it was estimated that on average every male from the age of ten upwards had at least one firearm and ample ammunition 23 During the rebellion 656 000 weapons of various types and 1 5 billion rounds of ammunition 3 5 million hand grenades and one million land mines were looted from army depots according to UNDP 24 At the village of Selite near Burrel a town 90 km north of capital Tirana an explosion occurred at an arms depot on 29 April after a group of villagers broke into the facility 25 The blast resulted in the deaths of 22 of the 200 village residents most of the victims coming from the same family 26 Treasury robberies editThe Krrabe Event Albanian Ngjarja e Krrabes was the theft of gold of the Albanian state treasury on 24 April 1997 The treasury hidden in tunnels near Krrabe outside Tirana consisted of 340 kg of gold ingots banknotes and other items 27 The perpetrators who were later tried and received prison sentences were Arian Bishqemi 7 years Blerim Haka 3 years Pellumb Dalti 6 years Enver Hyka 8 years and Ahmet Hyken 4 years 28 The Robbery of the Northern State Treasury Albanian Grabitja e Thesarit te Veriut was the theft of approximately 6 million from the Albanian state treasury in Shkoder in March 1997 A group of six people attacked the fortified building of the State Treasury with an antitank weapon The total amount of money that was inside the building was 8 million but the robbers only managed to get away with 6 million The few police still in the city soon arrived at the scene and took control of the remaining assets Later the thieves were seen by several witnesses meeting at the outskirts of Shkoder where they divided the money between themselves After the robbery the police and investigators began investigations in Shkoder In the spring of 1998 more than a year later the investigators closed the file and it was given to the police for further investigation The perpetrators of this crime are still unknown to this day citation needed International intervention editOn 28 March the United Nations adopted Resolution 1101 for humanitarian aid to Albania and on 15 April Operation Alba forces began to arrive finally withdrawing on 12 August About 7 000 soldiers in the multinational Italian led UN mission came to Albania to restore order and rule of law 29 The first forces were deployed in Durres Normality first returned to Tirana An element of the Operation Alba forces stayed in place retraining the military to modern standards this unit was joined from mid May by members of WEU s Multinational Albanian Police element doing the same with the police after restructuring the legislative base which caused the problem Involved were nbsp Greek Armed Forces Operation Alba Operation Cosmas led by Lt Col Dimitrios Tzimanis 30 nbsp Italian Armed Forces Operation Alba nbsp Romanian Armed Forces Operation Alba nbsp Turkish Armed Forces Operation Alba nbsp Austrian Armed Forces Operation Alba nbsp French Armed Forces Operation Alba nbsp German Armed Forces Operation Libelle led by Col Henning Glawatz nbsp United States Armed Forces Operation Silver Wake led by Col Emerson GardnerUN resolutions edit Main articles United Nations Security Council Resolution 1101 and United Nations Security Council Resolution 1114 These UNSC resolutions provide the basis for the establishment amp execution of the mission resolution 1101 and its limited extension resolution 1114 Evacuation operations edit Main articles Operation Libelle Operation Silver Wake and Operation Cosmas During March 1997 several nations launch evacuation missions to evacuate their nationals embassy personnel and numerous other civilians by air and sea weblinks see above Italy carried out a series of different rescue flights and evacuations by sea without giving these actions an overarching operation name Peacekeeping edit Main article Operation Alba As part of a peacekeeping mission based on UN Security Council Resolution 1101 a multinational protection force of more than 7 000 troops was sent to Albania in mid April By mid August 1997 it had largely restored public order and secured new elections under OSCE supervision 31 Snap elections editMain articles 1997 Albanian monarchy referendum and 1997 Albanian parliamentary electionDuring 1997 a referendum on restoring the monarchy was held in Albania on June 29 1997 alongside early parliamentary elections 32 It was rejected by 66 7 of the voters 33 while former Crown Prince Leka claimed that 65 7 voted in favour 34 Meanwhile the parliamentary election result was an overwhelming victory for the opposition Socialist Party of Albania which won 100 of the 151 seats with the voter turnout being 72 6 35 Armed groups editGangs edit Taking advantage of the difficult situations criminal groups armed themselves and took control of entire cities Most leaders had been imprisoned in Greece but suddenly escaped and returned to Albania The most famous case is that of Zani Caushi who escaped from the high security prison of Larissa in February 1997 and with a group of friends established the gang of Cole in Vlora In Vlora five gangs were created but two ruled the city the gang of Zani and the gang of Gaxhai Movement in the city started at 10 00 when people gathered in Flag s Square to hear the Committee of Rescue and ended at 13 00 After that hour the streets were deserted and the only people who moved were gang members Gangs announced through speakers and flyers that other people were not to go out as there would be fighting Each night brought attacks with explosives and shooting leaving dozens dead In Berat Altin Dardha s rule was even more severe In Lushnje Aldo Bare s gang had control The worst crime that this gang committed was to behead an opponent Cities ruled by gangs were Vlora Berat Tepelena Memaliaj Ballshi Saranda Gjirokastra Lushnja Pogradec Cerrik and Tropoja Gang of Cole Albanian Banda e Coles in Vlora led by Myrteza Caushi 36 known as Partizan 37 and Zani 38 Named after Cole neighbourhood in the eastern part of the city which it controlled 37 Supported SP 38 Kakami in Vlora led by Fredi Nehbiu Controlled western district of Babice 37 Gang of Gaxhai Albanian Banda e Gaxhait in Vlora led by Gazmend Gaxhai Braka Named after leader Members were from Cerkovine the city of Vlora and other southern cities and was formed in March 1997 in Vlora Their main rivals were the Cole Supported DP Gang of Muko in Vlora Gang of Altin Dardha in Berat led by Altin Dardha Gang of Aldo Bare in Lushnje led by Aldo Bare Salvation Committees edit Salvation Committees also known as People s Committees or the Committee of Public Salvation Albanian Komiteti i Shpetimit Publik were organizations created during the unrest They were established in many regions of the country in order to usurp the functions of the Albanian state 38 page needed 39 They were most influential in the south where early in the crisis the local Salvation Committees merged to form the National Salvation Committee and demanded the removal of President Sali Berisha 40 Many committees were based on local organisations for the Socialist Party of Albania and saw themselves as protectors of democracy against authoritarian one man rule The Albanian government viewed them as similar to Communist era local party organisations and therefore a potential threat of returning to Communist rule 39 page needed Timeline editJanuary edit nbsp Money lenders in Vlora8 16 January 41 Multiple pyramid schemes fail Kamberi Cenaj Silva Malvasia Kambo Grunjasi Dypero Bashkimi Beno Pogoni B amp G Kobuzi Arkond Adelin A Delon Agi M Leka Company Global Limited Co Cashku and Sudja City of Vlora hit as the main center of such schemes Government froze the assets of Vefa Holding and Gjallica 15 January 42 Hundreds gathered at the palace where Maksude Kadena owner of Sudes lived Among them were the leaders of the opposition They confronted the police 16 January 43 Maksude Kadena owner of Sude arrested The Socialist newspaper Voice of the People wrote From Tirana to Vlora across the country in revolt referring to about 6000 vlonjate protests held in the Flag Square 18 January 44 An emergency meeting of the Democratic National Council created a parliamentary committee to investigate 19 January 45 A protest against Sudes held in the Square Opposition leaders attempted to lead the protest against the government 20 January 46 1500 people gather at bankrupt scheme People Xhaferri Democracy to get their money 22 January 47 Trial begins against charitable donations in fact pyramid schemes People s Democracy Xhaferri and People both directed by people with close ties to Communist State Security Rrapush Xhaferri and Bashkim Driza Kerxhaliu administrator of Gjallices was arrested 23 January 48 Police arrested 50 employees of People and Xhaferri The newspaper Albania wrote Surely that is the work by Hajdin Sejdia He left with several million dollars in 1991 but returned unexpectedly in 1996 and began to distribute money to creditors The truth is that he received 3 million from Xhaferri and People and this led to increased confidence of citizens in these schemes a result of Sejdise s arrival was an increase of some tens of millions of dollars in deposits of citizens to these schemes within 2 3 months This avoided the premature failure of these schemes 24 January Lushnja City Hall and a cinema were burned by demonstrators angry about the arrest of Xhaferri 25 January 49 Demonstrators came from villages surrounding Lushnja to burn and destroy any state institution in Lushnje Tritan Shehu was held hostage for several hours at the City Stadium City of Lushnje was burned by the crowd led by local SP leaders Other clashes take place in Elbasan Memaliaj Lac Kucove 26 January 50 A demonstration of the Socialist Party in downtown Tirana degenerated into a violent clash between police and opposition supporters Some socialist leaders were injured by police The opposition destroyed the National History Museum the Palace of Culture Et hem Bey Mosque and the Municipality of South Tiranes An angry mob burned the city hall Albpetrol was burned in Patos by terrorist groups 27 January 51 An angry crowd burned the hall of Peshkopi and the police station Four policemen were seriously injured 29 January 52 Police arrested 140 people in Berat and 20 in Polican for involvement in violent demonstrations and illegal activities 30 January 53 The Forum for Democracy was formed by opposition parties led by Daut Gumeni Fatos Lubonja from the Albanian Helsinki Committee AHC was known for anti Berisha positions and Kurt Kola president of the Association of the Politically Persecuted also indebted to the people Soon this Forum began organizing anti government protests 31 January 54 The newspaper Koha Jone asked the creditors of Gjallices to go to the firm to get money on 6 February The aim was to promote violent demonstrations at Gjallica February edit 4 February 55 Partial returns of deposits began based on a government decision The opposition criticised Democrats for delaying the start of the process Forum for Democracy proposes the creation of a technical government to resolve the crisis 5 February The bankrupt firm Gjallica was taken over by the former State Security The cities most affected by the bankruptcy of the firm are Vlora 145 million U S and Kukes 16 million U S Protests begin in Vlora 6 February 56 Thousands join violent protests in Vlora Kukes formed a Committee with the firm s creditors and is seeking a legal solution to this issue They seek to become shareholders of this firm Similar committees established in Gjirokastra and Berat 7 February 57 Protesters block road in Memaliaj 8 February 58 Continued anti government protests in Vlora 9 February 59 Police station in Vlora attacked by armed crowd casualties include one dead and one injured Forum for Democracy declares that the only solution of the crisis is through protests against the government 10 February 60 Violence continued in the South DPA headquarters were burned by armed groups President and government resigned A group of about 50 Special Forces troops were viciously attacked by a mob of thousands EuroNews broadcast footage of the police siege The rebellion spread throughout southern Albania A state of emergency was proposed in the South 11 February 61 Artur Rustemi the first victim of the rebellion was buried in Vlora His funeral turned into an anti government demonstration that burned ADP headquarters in Vlora Alarm spread over the lack of bread in the city The Forum for Democracy called for dialogue with President Berisha kuzhtezuar 12 15 February 62 Multiple kidnappings occurred Schools closed and shops were allowed to sell up to 9 o clock 13 February 63 Kurt Kola was accused as a traitor and collaborator with communist executioners 14 February 64 Anti government protests develop in Fier 17 February 65 The Legality Movement condemned the violence and refused dialogue with the Forum for Democracy Ministers meet in Tirana 18 February 66 President Berisha met with citizens of Lushnja He promised to do everything to resolve the crisis The National Front sought resignation of the government 20 February 67 Hunger strike began at University Ismail Kamal of Vlora Approximately 50 students joined the strike and demanded the resignation of the government Forum for Democracy organised a violent demonstration in Tirana in which five policemen were seriously injured A group of students met with President Berisha in Vlora and agreed to resolve the crisis peacefully 22 February Trial began of leaders of the Gjallices Forum for Democracy supported student hunger strike in Vlora 24 February 68 Angry crowds attack state institutions in the south 26 February 69 As part of the Presidential tour of areas affected by the crisis Berisha met citizens of Gjirokaster and promised to make all efforts to resolve the crisis Thousands surrounded University Ismail Kamal to protect against a rumored attack by state forces 28 February 70 Forty six students joined a University of Gjirokastra hunger strike Their demands were similar to those of students in Vlora Armed crowds attacked and burned a SHIK branch three agents burned to death in the fire while three others were attacked and killed by the crowd Three members of the crowd were also killed March edit 1 March The city of Vlora had no functioning government Vlora was controlled by gangs and traffickers and mass exodus began In Lushnje police were brutally beaten News of massacre of SHIK officers shook the government Rebels took control of the Albanian Navy Pasha Liman Base a state symbol of resistance The government reacted by declaring a state of emergency and sent more troops to areas around Vlora and the town of Tepelena In response rebels set up cannons at the entrance of the city and pointed them towards Tirana A massive explosion destroyed an arms storage facility where Himare was burning including police buildings in Gjirokastra 2 March Alexander Meksi s government resigned after failing to resolve the crisis The event was celebrated in Vlora and the south by thousands firing AK 47s into the air as a sign of victory Parliament approved the chief of Gazideden Union to restore order Immediately Gazidede ordered indefinite closure of schools throughout the country and imposed restrictions on the press and consumer goods In Kavaja bastion of PD over 5000 people voluntarily armed to defend the city from an envisioned attack by armed gangs Italian news agency ANSA commented The whole scenario is emerging as a politico military strategy and not as a manifestation of spontaneous popular To gather people in the Flag Square are available for days special machines 3 March President Berisha was re elected with the votes of DP members of the parliament alone This led to massive riots in southern and central Albania The remaining warehouses exploded and remaining bands of the military formed committees The city of Saranda was also captured by rebels with fighters based out of Vlora arriving by boat and burning every government building in the city including the library In Vlora a local detention facility was broken into and more than 400 guns were seized Gunmen burned down the Vocational Training Centre in Vlora Meanwhile SHIK tried to contain the rebellion to Vlora Saranda and Delvina to stop it from spreading to the rest of the country Destruction and killings continued throughout southern Albania The seven million dollar Vocational Training Centre in Vlora was burned which had cost the Albanian government A group of approximately 100 member Adipetrol was held responsible and their compound in Gjirokastra was raided Masked raiders captured a warship and rebels attacked Saranda where police and government buildings were burned Criminals engineered a prison break releasing hundreds of prisoners seized 400 weapons and set fire to the town library In Kucove a bread shortage was announced The army recovered control of Fier and began to disarm the population 4 March The Committee of Public Salvation was formed in Vlore headed by Albert Shyti This committee began to act as a parallel government Snipers occupied every building in Vlore and every street put up barricades to prevent attacks by SHIK The Mifoli Bridge over the River Vjose was blocked and mined this bridge which separated the two parts of Albania would become a symbol of the rebellion As students ended their hunger strike gunmen in Saranda used navy craft to plunder weapons caches Gangs patrolled the sea using Albanian Navy ships Outside Saranda one member of SHIK was burnt alive and another was taken hostage while two others escaped Fifty soldiers joined the rebels and two Albanian Air Force pilots defected and flew their planes to Italy The pilots claimed they were ordered to attack civilians Gazidede s plan to isolate the insurgency in Vlora failed as it spread across the south After fierce fighting in Delvina the rebels forced the army to pull back In Saranda the rebels put up roadblocks In the South more depots exploded Rebels placed snipers in mansions locked the Mifolit bridge and raised barricades to prevent entry of the military and SHIK In Shkodra the army capitulated and the hunger strike ended In Saranda organised gangs raided an Albanian Navy base and captured thousands of weapons The Public Salvation Committee of Vlore was formed It began to act as a parallel government by conducting a de facto coup Its leader was Albert Shyti The main collaborator of the Committee was Myrteza Caushi known as Zani The strongman of Vlora Under the example of Vlora Shyti created Salvation Committees everywhere in Albania Demonstrators would never have succeeded in overpowering the Vlora police if they had not been armed and organised by local organised crime bosses and former members of the Communist era secret police Sigurimi who saw this as their chance to damage the new political system Typical of the latter was Albert Shyti who returned from Greece with a private arsenal and set himself up as the head of the Vlora Salvation Committees a pattern replicated in other towns and cities in southern Albania 5 March Warehouses in Memaliaj and other places were blown up Rebels burned police buildings in these cities Greek TV Mega stated Today armed groups in southern Albania raised the banner of Northern Epirus for the first time They demand the separation of the southern part from the rest of the country ranging from Tepelena thus proclaiming the autonomy of southern Albania Albania s longstanding problem has been that of North South autonomy which is divided along the Shkumbin river citation needed 6 March President Berisha held a meeting with representatives of political parties to sign a statement condemning the massive plunder and destruction of military warehouses and calling for surrender of weapons Six hours later the SP and DAP leaders denied any responsibility and obligation towards the statement that they had earlier described as a political success Greek TV Sky News stated A few minutes have emerged from the meeting the leaders of armed groups of Saranda who have decided to attack tonight at Gjirokastra They will not leave and anxiously await today s popular trial will be done with three prisoners captured in the main square of Sarande who allegedly attacked SHIK employees and northern ethnics that increases the balance of victims in Vlora 7 March The rebels from Saranda in collaboration with local army forces entered Gjirokastra and took some Albanian Special Forces troops hostage The leaders of the revolt in Gjirokastra were members of PAD Arben Imami appointed Defence Minister later in 2009 and Ridvan Peshkepia With the fall of Gjirokastra the entire south of the country was out of government control Weapons continued to spread across the country Tirana s Rinas International Airport was attacked by villagers from the surrounding area and the Agricultural University of Tirana was looted Albanian Army soldiers defected to rebels in Gjirokastra Military assets were taken by gangs and the city s military committee With Gjirokastra in the hands of rebels the entire south of the country was out of control Weapons continued to spread National Rinas Airport was attacked by villagers from the surrounding areas 8 March President Berisha organised a meeting with all parties concerned with the creation of the new government Leaders of the Gjirokastra division were vetedorezuar and had taken the lead of rebellion in this city Gangs kidnapped a number of auxiliary military forces of Tirana and had blocked several tanks and a helicopter At midnight attack and spoiled milk processing factory in Libohova 9 March A Government of National Reconciliation Union was created in Tirana headed by Gjirokastra mayor Bashkim Fino The new government called on former army members to contribute to restoring peace and order President Berisha appeared on VAT in a statement to the nation where he called for reconciliation faith unity and calmness 10 March In Gramsh rebels attacked the police building and took control of Fier s streets Berat fell into the hands of gangs and became the main centre of rebellion after Vlora Polican Kelcyra and Skrapari fell In Kucove rebels took control of 19 MiGs Vlora Rescue Committee welcomed the agreement of 9 March American Foundation for Eastern Europe directed a letter to the Albanian Embassy in America stating It s great naivety not understand that the Committee of Vlora and its leaders are inspired by communist mafia type the KGB Letters to the conclusion stated Mr Berisha must decide by any means the rule of law using military force may even On the evening of 10 March the U S Embassy welcomed the agreement citation needed Unopposed on the battlefield rebels in the south launched a wave of extraordinary destruction In Gramsh they attacked a local police station in Fier they took control of the streets Berat fell into the hands of gangs and became one of the main centres of rebellion Polican and Kelcyra were taken over by criminal gangs In Kucove rebels took control of 19 Soviet made MiG combat aircraft The rebellion spread to the north 11 March Birth of the Committee of the South that rejected Berisha and the return of lost money If the Committee proposed the formation of a new state separate from Tirana Army depots in Kukes were looted and scores of armed looters damaged state institutions The citizens of Kukes abandon the town for one day due to an announcement that the Serbian army had crossed the border The revolt spread to the north the army capitulated everywhere and a huge weapons depot was captured in Shkodra Prominent organised crime figures escaped from prison and put together gangs effectively taking control of many areas Gangs looted banks took hostages and robbed businesses The chaos was complete and the whole country with the exception of the capital Tirana was completely paralysed 12 March President Berisha decreed a Government of National Reconciliation Revolt broke out in the South 13 March President Berisha and Prime Minister Fino requested international military assistance Tirana was on the verge of invasion by the rebels Curfew was declared Several hundred volunteers mainly from the North protected the capital Berisha experienced what he felt was the most dangerous night of his life The last to emerge from prison are Fatos Nano and Ramiz Alia More revolts in the South In Lezha rebels burned a police building Ismail Kadare appeared in a message the Albanians in the Voice of America He stated The clock was turned back in Albania s civil war between the nationalists and communists in the years 1943 44 He criticised foreign media and political elite and calling on his compatriots calm to overcome the crisis The French news agency Air France Press claimed The riots in Albania were a military coup The United States Operation Silver Wake evacuation mission for civilians and embassy personnel begins in Tirana 14 March Franz Vranitski was appointed to solve the Albanian crisis The US Ambassador appeared on VAT stating that its diplomatic mission will not leave and that the American people supported the Albanian people In Tirana the population began to disarm A tobacco plantation and a Coca Cola factory were attacked The SHIK chief resigned Rebels occupied the port of Durres The German evacuation mission Operation Libelle for civilians and embassy staff takes place in Tirana The Greek government evacuates civilians and embassy staff in the port of Durres during Operation Cosmas despite thousands of gunmen in the port area 15 March Rinas airport was recovered by the government Parliament approved the Government of National Reconciliation A Committee for the Protection of Durres was formed 16 March A massive rally in Tirana called for peace and cooperation A day of national mourning in honor of victims of the rebellion was decreed In Fier radioactive material was looted President Berisha decreed amnesty for 51 prisoners 17 March A Presidential decree released Fatos Nano opposition leader jailed since 1993 on charges of corruption The President left the country in a U S military helicopter Fatos Nano held a press conference stating his support for the new government 18 March A Committee for the Rescue of North and Middle Albania threatened the new government if it recognised the committees of the South As a result the government did not recognise any committees 20 March The Assembly of Public Salvation Committee demanded the removal of Berisha and proposed the creation of Federation of South Rinas Airport reopened 21 March Greece sought to enter Albanian territory on the pretext of protecting minorities Berisha requests Turkish military aid The Turkish government states that if Greek troops entered Albania then Turkey would immediately invade Greece and capture Athens The Turkish government demanded that the mistakes made in Bosnia not be repeated in Albania The head of Gazidede Union at a hearing in the Albanian Parliament accused anti Albanian Greek circles Albanian Socialists military and criminals He stated The integrity of Albania no longer exists and the rebellion was directed towards the destruction of any historic and cultural facility with long term goal to eradicate any historical evidence autoktonitetit the Albanians citation needed 22 March Armed gangs rule Saranda and Gjirokastra under a regime of violence and terror Dozens of people were killed 23 March Control of the Port of Durres was reestablished Berat was ruled by gangs Numerous attacks were attempted attacks with explosives 25 March 3 policemen were killed in Vlore 26 March The American evacuation of civilians Operation Silver Wake ends and most U S Marines return to their ships offshore 27 March The Democratic Party claimed that relations between Greek and Albanian peoples had always been excellent and the Greek extremist groups did not represent all Greek people nbsp The Otranto tragedy28 March Otranto tragedy In the Otranto channel an Albanian ship run by a Vlora gang was rammed and sunk by an Italian naval vessel by mistake 82 refugees died A National Assembly of Committees of the South was held Opposition political figures participated They demanded the President s resignation They rejected the Government of National Reconciliation The leaders of these committees were former exponents of the Enver Hoxha regime In the village of Levan the biggest massacre of the affair occurred 24 people were killed by clashes between roma and a gang A total of over 110 died United Nations adopted resolution no 1101 for humanitarian aid 29 March 5 were killed in South and Berat 30 March President Berisha and Prime Minister Fino sent condolences to the families of Otranto victims Albania requested an international investigation of Otranto 31 March Proclamation of national mourning in honour of the Otranto victims Ismail Kadare stated in the Italian media that it clarification needed is shocked by this tragedy and that the authority of government and the President need to resume in place April edit 1 April Leaders of the Democratic Party debated the resignation of Berisha and Shehu Fino urged the Socialist Party to withdraw from the 28 March agreement with the Committee of the South 3 April Police made gains in restoring order in Tirana Special Forces take control of Berat 4 April The U S Embassy stated that it would not meet with any Salvation Committee and that the only legitimate institutions are the government and president 5 April Armed gangs ruled Pogradec 7 April Dozens of people in Fier were wounded and 5 killed including two children The Haklaj family led the riots 3 were killed in Durres 8 April In Gramsh clashes broke out between local gangs and another from Laci The city had become a center of arms sales 12 April Leka Zog arrived in Tirana along with the royal court Dozens of mentally ill escape from Elbasan 13 April Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi visited Vlore with Albanian Zani Caushi as his bodyguard 15 April Operation Alba an international army of 7000 troops under the direction of Italy began to arrive in Albania The first forces deployed in Durres Normality returned to Tirana Held a successful operation to apprehend criminals Gramsh and collecting looted weapons 17 April Political parties agreed to hold elections on 29 June 18 April 71 A bomb exploded in the courtyard of the University of Elbasan 19 April A repository rocket explodes in Gjirokastra Fino met with Leka Zog 21 April Multinational forces deployed in Vlora Criminal gangs attacked and spoiled the city of Gramsh and terrorized citizens in Corovode 22 April A bomb exploded near ex local Flora in Tirana 23 April International forces choose not to work with any committee of the South 24 April Police Station Attacked in Elbasan Leka Zog visited Vlore 26 April Council of Europe demanded the disarmament of illegal Salvation Committees 4 children injured by a bomb in Gjirokastra In Shperthehen 35 meters of train tracks were demolished 28 April In Lushnje a crowd of roughly 4 000 gathered to protest The protest was initiated by the Committee of Public Salvation Demands included Berisha s resignation reform of the electoral process emergency parliamentary elections then scheduled for 2001 and reimbursement of 100 of all financial losses Leaders of the Committee joined the rally 29 April Schools reopened in the North Vlora continued under the power of the gangs 30 April 27 people left dead by the explosion of a weapons depot in Burrel Three warehouses exploded in Berat May edit 4 May Dozens were killed in Shkodra Berat Tirana and Durres 10 May Special Forces struggled with armed gangs in Gramsh Gramsh Rescue Committee prevented distribution of newspapers in the city 14 May Kakavise attacked the border Remains blocked the Berat Lushnje road A military post was attacked in Berat 15 May A warehouse in Gjirokastra exploded injuring 14 people and killing 4 others An entire family was killed in Pogradec 19 May Violence continued in the south Killings continued in Vlora In Memaliaj police and Rescue Committee joined forces against one of the gangs 21 May Continued attacks against bridges in Gjirokastra Violence continued in Saranda Vlora Shkodra and Durres 23 May In Cerrik city gangs attacked a Special Forces armored vehicle 6 Special Forces of the Republican Guard were killed by grenade attacks 3 others were captured and taken hostage 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 excessive citations June edit 17 June Massacre of Ura Vajgurore June The Democrat leadership was unable to operate a normal campaign in southern Albania Their campaign was accompanied by riots in those cities leaving behind more than 60 people killed 29 June Parliamentary elections were held Socialist Party allies won while the Democrats suffered the biggest loss in their history Many of the members of the Salvation Committees came out for leftist candidates though they promised they would not get a government position without resolving the crisis On election day a referendum was held over the form of governance The Republic prevailed over monarchy with 65 of the votes July edit 3 July Pretender to the throne of the abolished monarchy King Leka I organised a demonstration accusing the electoral commission of rigging the results of the referendum in which two thirds of voters rejected the proposed restoration of monarchy Five people were killed in a clash between demonstrators and police citation needed July Gangs continued to rule cities with fear and terror Murders robberies and trafficking of weapons people and drugs increased citation needed 24 July Berisha resigned He had promised that if the Socialists won he would leave because they could not endure institutional cohabitation with them The national assembly elected Rexhep Meidani as the new president Massive gunfire in Tirana celebrated Berisha s resignation Major fighting ended August edit 11 August Operation Alba s military forces left the country Casualties editAccording to Christopher Jarvis there were 2 000 killed 2 According to Fred C Abrahams between March and May 1997 some 1 600 people were killed most in shootouts between rival gangs 80 An UNIDIR document claimed more than 2 000 killed in March alone 81 Aftermath editDamage from the rebellion was estimated at US 200 million dollars and some 3 700 to 5 000 wounded Lawsuits were filed against the bosses of the rogue firms citation needed Various members of the government including Safet Zhulali and Agim Shehu were sentenced in absentia citation needed In elections in June and July 1997 Berisha and his party were voted out of power and the leftist coalition headed by the Socialist Party won The Socialist party elected Rexhep Meidani as President of the Albanian Republic All UN forces left Albania by 11 August See also editList of massacres in Albania Kosovo WarReferences edit ALBANIA parliamentary elections Kuvendi Popullor 1997 a b c Jarvis 2000 a b c Jarvis Christopher March 2000 The Rise and Fall of Albania s Pyramid Schemes Finance amp Development A Quarterly Magazine of the IMF Crisis in Albania Public Broadcasting Service Archived from the original on 30 October 2013 Retrieved 23 August 2017 a b c Pike John Albanian Civil War 1997 Globalsecurity org Retrieved 14 June 2010 Greek Army Evacuation of 240 Foreign Dignitaries from Albania Operation Kosmas Archived from the original on 23 December 2007 Retrieved 15 March 2015 Salehyan Idean Gleditsch Kristian Skrede April 2006 Refugees and the Spread of Civil War International Organization 60 02 doi 10 1017 S0020818306060103 Kosovo Background to crisis March 1999 Archived from the original on 15 May 2008 Retrieved 17 June 2010 Following the February March 1997 looting of Albanian Army barracks and depots weapons became even more readily available The current price for a Kalashnikov is barely US 300 and the most conservative estimates of Albanians stocks now start at 25 000 hidden AK assault rifles Also available are anti tank weapons rifle and hand grenades and even small calibre mortars and anti aircraft guns Robert Bideleux 11 November 1998 Kosovo s Conflict History Today Pike John Albanian Civil War 1997 Global Security These riots and the state of anarchy which they caused are known as the Albanian civil war of 1997 Barjaba Kosta 2004 Albania s democratic elections 1991 1997 analyses documents and data Edition Sigma ISBN 978 3 89404 237 0 For a detailed chronological course of events in the Albanian civil war Adcock Gene 31 October 2012 CCT The Eye of the Storm Volume II The GWOT Years Author House p 47 ISBN 978 1 4772 6997 8 trapped by Albania s civil war Jusufi 2017 Florian Bieber Zidas Daskalovski 2 August 2004 Understanding the War in Kosovo Routledge p 83 ISBN 978 1 135 76155 4 In early 1997 Albanian society was at the brink of collapse and only narrowly escaped civil war when pyramid investment schemes collapsed taking with them the savings of a majority of the already poor Albanian population Kodderitzsch Severin 1 January 1999 Reforms in Albanian Agriculture Assessing a Sector in Transition World Bank Publications p 7 ISBN 978 0 8213 4429 3 No progress was made in structural reforms In early 1997 Albania plunged into deep economic crisis Rioting triggered by the collapse of the pyramid schemes intensified to near civil war with the government losing control over large parts of the country D Rai c 25 September 2002 Statehood and the Law of Self Determination Martinus Nijhoff Publishers p 69 ISBN 90 411 1890 X An example of a situation which features aspects of anarchy rather than civil war is the case of Albania after the outbreak of chaos in 1997 Anthony Clunies Ross Petar Sudar 1 January 1998 Albania s Economy in Transition and Turmoil 1990 97 Ashgate p 241 ISBN 978 1 84014 563 2 first half of 1997 was not a civil war its impact on production and trade might well have been similar a b On War article On War article 27 November 2003 Archived from the original on 4 January 2010 Retrieved 14 June 2010 1 Archived 23 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine Nohlen amp Stover p139 Kur opozita rrihej barbarisht 28 maj 1996 socialistet protestonin per zgjedhjet e manipuluara in Albanian Top Channel tv 28 May 2019 Retrieved 28 May 2019 Refworld Albania Information from 1990 to present on the ShIK secret police Profile of Albania PDF Archived from the original PDF on 9 January 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2012 UNDP Albanian Human Development Report 1998 Tirana United Nations Development Program 1999 No full confirmation on the number of the victims in Selite Burrel Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare Retrieved 18 October 2013 Explosion of army depot in Burrel kills 22 Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare Retrieved 18 October 2013 Vjedhja e thesarit ne tunelet e Krrabes Info Arkiva 25 September 2008 Rihetime per vjedhjen e arit te Krrabes Info Arkiva 25 September 2008 Ali Maurizio 2003 L attivita di peacekeeping della Forza Multinazionale di Protezione in Albania report in Italian Rome Italy Universita Roma Tre Facolta di Scienze Politiche via HAL Dina Vagena Tipana Apostolh eleftherotypia Archived from the original on 17 February 2013 Retrieved 6 July 2011 Ettore Greco 7 March 1998 Delegated Peacekeeping The Case of Operation Alba PDF Scuola superiore S Anna Pisa Retrieved 22 August 2023 Dieter Nohlen amp Philip Stover 2010 Elections in Europe A data handbook p133 ISBN 978 3 8329 5609 7 Nohlen amp Stover p 137 Prince Leka Albanian Royal House Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 10 April 2011 Nohlen amp Stover p140 OMR 1997 p 10 a b c Paul B Rich 27 July 2016 Warlocks in International Relations Springer pp 115 ISBN 978 1 349 27688 2 a b c Arsovska 2015 a b James Pettifer 2007 The Albanian question reshaping the Balkans Vickers Miranda London I B Tauris ISBN 978 0857710246 OCLC 611201452 Abrahams Fred 2015 Modern Albania From Dictatorship to Democracy in Europe New York NYU Press ISBN 978 1479896684 Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 13 Janar 14 Janar 15 Janar 16 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 15 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 16 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 18 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 19 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 20 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 22 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 23 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 25 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 26 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 27 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 29 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 30 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 31 Janar Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 4 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 6 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 7 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 8 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 9 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 10 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 11 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 12 February 13 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 14 February 15 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 13 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 14 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 17 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 18 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 20 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 24 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 26 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 28 February Agjencia Telegrafike Shqiptare 18 April Albanian Telegraphic Agency ATA 97 10 18 Hri org 19 October 1997 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Politicians to Be Punished If Cerrik Massacre Fully Investigated Shehu Albanian Times Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Arsim Histri Turizemi Politika gt Shqiperia Masakra e Cerrikut May 2007 Archived from the original on 3 September 2011 Agjensia Sot Sot com al 12 November 2008 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Procesi Met Bozi rrezon deshmine e gardistit te plagosur Albania 2010 05 12 Lajme shqiperia com 12 May 2010 Retrieved 12 November 2011 2 dead link I penduari Ju tregoj masakren e Cerrikut Tiranachat net 28 January 2009 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Masakra e Cerrikut Ish gardisti Met Bozi urdheroi djegien e kufomave Albania 2010 06 02 Lajme shqiperia com 2 June 2010 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Abrahams 2016 p 219 Mugumya 2005 p 34 Sources editTripodi Paolo 2016 The Collapse of Albania In Rich Paul B ed Warlords in International Relations Springer ISBN 978 1 349 27688 2 Abrahams Fred C 2016 Modern Albania From Dictatorship to Democracy in Europe NYU Press ISBN 978 1 4798 3809 7 Arsovska Jana 2015 Decoding Albanian Organized Crime Culture Politics and Globalization University of California Press ISBN 9780520282803 Mugumya Geofrey 2005 From Exchanging Weapons for Development to Security Sector Reform in Albania Gaps and Grey Areas in Weapon Collection Programmes Assessed by Local People United Nations Publications UNIDIR ISBN 978 92 9045 173 0 Daniel Vaughan Whitehead 1999 Albania in Crisis The Predictable Fall of the Shining Star Edward Elgar ISBN 978 1 84064 070 0 Transition Vol 4 Open Media Research Institute 1997 Renia e Demokracise Afrim Krasniqi 1998 Eurorilindja Une e pashe kush e dogji Vloren Gezim Zilja 2000 Pelioni Fondi Monetar Nderkombetar Ngritja dhe renia e piramidave shqiptare Impakti i piramidave ne Shqiperi Piramidat shqiptare Banka Boterore Shqiperia nen hijen e skemave piramidaleFurther reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1997 rebellion in Albania Jusufi I 2017 Albania s Transformation since 1997 Successes and Failures HRCAK a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Andrea De Guttry Fabrizio Pagani 1999 La Crisi albanese del 1997 l azione dell Italia e delle organizzazioni internazionali verso un nuovo modello di gestione delle crisi F Angeli ISBN 978 88 464 1454 0 Perlmutter T 1998 The politics of proximity The Italian response to the Albanian crisis International Migration Review pp 203 222 Schmidt F 1998 Upheaval in Albania Current History 97 p 127 Kalra M S 1998 Inflation and money demand in Albania No 98 101 International Monetary Fund Miall H 1997 The OSCE role in Albania A Success for Conflict Prevention Helsinki Monitor 8 p 74 Nicholson B 1999 The beginning of the end of a rebellion southern Albania May June 1997 East European Politics and Societies 13 3 pp 543 565 Kritsiotis D 1999 Security Council Resolution 1101 1997 and the Multinational Protection Force of Operation Alba in Albania Leiden Journal of International Law 12 3 pp 511 547 Jarvis 1999 The Rise and Fall of the Pyramid Schemes in Albania IMF Working Paper 99 98 International Monetary Fund Washington Jarvis C March 2000 The rise and fall of the pyramid schemes in Albania Finance amp Development 37 1 Foster E 1998 Ad Hoc in Albania Did Europe Fail A Rejoinder Security Dialogue 29 2 pp 213 217 Anarchy in Albania Collapse of European Collective Security Modern Albania From Dictatorship to Democracy Fred C Abrahams 2015 NYU Press False Apocalypse From Stalinism to Capitalism Fatos Lubonja 2014 Istros Books Renia e Demokracise Afrim Krasniqi 1998 Eurorilindja in Albanian Shqiperia jashteVeriutandJugut Ibrahim Kelmendi 1997 Zeri i Kosoves in Albanian Une e pashe kush e dogji Vloren Gezim Zilja 2000 Pelioni in Albanian Skaner 1997 Gezim Zilja in Albanian Kryengritje e tradhtuar Panajot Barka in Albanian Lufta jo civile Prec Zogaj in Albanian Humnere 97 Bashkim Fino in Albanian Viti 97 Prapaskenat e krizes qe rrenuan shtetin Mero Baze 2010 Toena in Albanian External links editAlbanian Civil War 1997 GlobalSecurity org AP Video Archive on 1997 in Albania Documentary of Cerrik Massacre with footage of hostage officers Met Bozi in court The Pyramid Scheme that Collapsed a Nation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1997 Albanian civil unrest amp oldid 1204871685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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