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Between 1990 and 1992 Albania ended 46 years of xenophobic Communist rule and established a multiparty democracy. The transition has proven difficult as successive governments have tried to deal with high unemployment, widespread corruption, a dilapidated infrastructure, powerful organized crime networks with links to government officials, and disruptive political opponents. Albania has made incremental progress in its democratic development since first holding multiiparty elections in 1991, but deficiencies remain - particularly in regard to the rule of law. Despite some lingering problems, international observers have judged elections to be largely free and fair since the restoration of political stability following the collapse of pyramid schemes in 1997. In the 2005 general elections, the Democratic Party and its allies won a decisive victory on pledges of reducing crime and corruption, promoting economic growth, and decreasing the size of government. Although Albania's economy continues to grow, the country is still one of the poorest in Europe, hampered by a large informal economy, large public debt, and an inadequate energy and tranportation infrastructure. Albania has played a largely helpful role in managing inter-ethnic tensions in southeastern Europe, and is continuing to work toward joining NATO and the EU. To be updated

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By pecheur
February 28th 2006
Albania At last! Europe » Albania » West » Tirana
The welcome sign to Albania
The welcome sign to Albania
Are those bullet holes?
Albania at last! June 10 *Sorry i dont have more photos, i'm kicking myself that i didnt take more, but i just wanst feeling very well (aka very hung-over!) I love this country!! For some reason I've always wanted to come to this place, its one of those places that you hear quite a bit, either in the news or from other people, yet you never hear it as an actual place to go. I also hear it in the context of its people, ethnic Albanians. I guess this probably has much to do with the problems in Kosovo and all. [View Full Entry]

pecheur - Matthew Phelps | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
912 Words | 2 Comment(s) | 9 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: February 28th 2006 | 1028 Views | [diary=43657]

The road less travelled
Leftovers
City center

Scorched Earth
Scorched Earth
The lush green countryside of eastern Albania and its huge forests....
Well finally the time came and we could not put off leavıng Ohrıd any longer, nice though the lake may be. Before leaving we had purchased a small, very cheap gas stove and a couple of spare cartridges as our trusty MSR had once agaın decıded it needed a rest - the pump has gıven up completely as we knew ıt probably would, we just hoped ıt would last to Istanbul... (it was damaged durıng an attempted mutiny by Erika way back ın Slovakia when she lıt the thıng havıng faıled to notıce a rather large fuel leak.....). We had al [View Full Entry]

Banchory to the Bosphorous by Bike - Erika Bird and Robin Searle | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
3496 Words | 3 Comment(s) | 5 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: October 11th 2005 | 3708 Views | [diary=22753]

Street Life
Shitet
Bunkers!

getting Out Of Didge
getting Out Of Didge
Traffic in Tirana on a good day...
For every reason to steer clear of Tirana, there exist two to go to Berat. An undiscovered jewel three hours south of the capital, Berat welcomes you with both the same Albanian hospitality as before, but in more majestic and sanitary surroundings. Mysteriously, much more trash seems to find its way into bins and dumpsters that appear out of nowhere. While indeed ditches and the riverbank are defiled with non-biodegradable garbage, it is only a fraction of scenes further north. This permits the eyes to concentrate on Berat’s real attraction: the white-faced village communities per [View Full Entry]

sapere18 - Richard Incorvati | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
2387 Words | 1 Comment(s) | 12 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: May 28th 2008 | 201 Views | [diary=278121]

Brining Home Groceries?
Touching Image
Olive Groves

View From Hotel Room
View From Hotel Room
First Impressions fortunately do not always reign supreme...
Some European cities beg to be explored. The less quiet, romantic, and dimly lit back streets of Lisbon and Budapest come to mind. Others cities, however, instill a deep desire to remain in your hotel room with the door locked and all windows shut tight. Tirana pertains to the latter. Albania’s capital does very little to diminish the already horrendous first impression the northern city of Shkodėr delivered. Hot and layered with a coating of chalky grime, Tirana only confirms that Albania is a third-world country in an otherwise modern Europe. Overcrowded and polluted with an endl [View Full Entry]

sapere18 - Richard Incorvati | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
2837 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 6 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: May 28th 2008 | 41 Views | [diary=278120]

All Aboard!
Exiting Train Station
Refuge in Tirana

Seriously...
Seriously...
This is the city on a GOOD day...
No buses run to Albania. In fact, when inquiring at the eyesore of a bus station in Pogdirica, Montenegro’s flat and characterless capital, I received the same reaction for going to Albania as I did for Moldova while in Odessa: “Why do you want to go there?” I took a look around and resisted the retort that Pogdirica was no gem, either. If Montenegro is to separate from Serbia (and we have seen how well the Serbs take it when that happens) Pogdirica will need a serious facelift to be taken seriously as a European capital. Unlike the thick line that [View Full Entry]

sapere18 - Richard Incorvati | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1139 Words | 0 Comment(s) | 3 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: May 28th 2008 | 34 Views | [diary=278119]

Back Streets
Police

By ConMel
August 4th 2005
Patience......pushed Europe » Albania
Rolling hills
Rolling hills
The southern Albanian landscape
Donkey drawn carts make their way along streets with pot-holes the size of Liechtenstein. Half-built, but abandoned houses dot the landscape, which is that shade of green that's almost yellow, and sometimes is. Kids play barefoot in dusty lanes, while the muezzin's call to prayer competes with church bells for the attention of the faithful...... Welcome to Albania, Europe's odd one out! Historically, culturally, and, most obviously to the foreign visitor, economically unique in the region, Albania has much going for it, but with a whole lot more to be done. We experienced its' pros [View Full Entry]

ConMel - Irish Traveller | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
863 Words | 4 Comment(s) | 3 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: August 5th 2005 | 982 Views | [diary=15672]

Berat fisherman
Berat houses

Tirana by night
Tirana by night
The main square in Tirana by night
I'm at the moment in Ioannina, Greece, but before writing about returning to the European Union I wish to write a few thoughts down about Albania. I already told about Shkoder fastly, but now after having completed my Albanian experience for this time, I wish to tell what I discovered about the culture. Since I'm only a backpacker going fastly through I offcourse haven't digged down into the Albanian lifestyle and do not know much more than others about Albania. But here is what I found out. Language difficulties Firstly I noticed the language and was pretty fast trying to fi [View Full Entry]

zofka - anna sofie andersen | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1714 Words | 11 Comment(s) | 3 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: July 30th 2005 | 4532 Views | [diary=15168]

Tirana in the evening
Gjirokaster in the evening

By zofka
July 25th 2005
Finally the only tourist Europe » Albania » North » Shkodėr
From the streets of Shkoder
From the streets of Shkoder
It is sad things that are to be found on the streets. Mainly human garbage, but once in a while you cross more absurd things, like a donkey bone
I arrived rather early in the morning in Ulcinj, coming from Kotor. I had heard it should be easy to get a minivan to Shkoder from here. But the informations there were confusing. One person told me it left at one o'clock, another at 14.30, then one said 11 and finally someone told me four o'clock. As I was running around pretty swetty and tired, I believe I was noticed by more than one person, wherefore a guy in the end offered me a ride to Shkoder for 7 euros which I felt was rather cheap considering the long way. I [View Full Entry]

zofka - anna sofie andersen | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
442 Words | 1 Comment(s) | 3 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: July 30th 2005 | 828 Views | [diary=14726]

The center of Shkoder
The mosque in Shkoder center

And this is the bus stop
And this is the bus stop
There's really not much I can say about this picture. It's a jumbled mess of people, cars, bikes, mini-buses, and construction.
Tirana, the capital of Albania, can only be characterized as a bustling, out of control city, where organization of the infrastructure and people just does not seem to exist. Example: When crossing the street, whether in a crosswalk or otherwise, you do so at your own risk because drivers have absolutely no regard for pedestrians. You are forced to quickly bob-and-weave in between moving cars that have had to slow down only because the roads are so bad that they cannot drive faster. Honestly, at some points you would think that you were passing through a war zone due mainly to [View Full Entry]

hugh_lostandfound - Grant Hughes | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1069 Words | 3 Comment(s) | 5 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: June 26th 2005 | 1073 Views | [diary=11988]

Multi-Colored Retro Anti-Communist Housing
A view from the back
Walking the border

Isa Boletini in Shkodra
Isa Boletini in Shkodra
A neighborhood in Albania with a monument to their national hero Isa Boletini who helped put down the relentless invasions of the Ottomans.
The suspense is now over; we have finally arrived and tomorrow we depart. As logic normally will tell you, though people rarely listen, is that the hype is usually nothing like the actual experience. It reminds me of the build-up to a GREAT New Year’s Eve party. Every time you have all the hype and all the expectation, it is never what you think it will be. In our case, we heard a lot of negative things about Albania before we finally ventured across the border from Ulcinj, Montenegro: “Don’t go there. It’s nothing but beggars”; “Why would you go to [View Full Entry]

hugh_lostandfound - Grant Hughes | Read The Full Entry | Subscribe
1264 Words | 7 Comment(s) | 3 Photo(s) | 0 Video(s)
Published: June 25th 2005 | 3303 Views | [diary=11876]

Tradita G&T
Bankomat Fever