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As youth flee Albania, an American calls It home

By Linda Gasparello - InsideSources.com | Dec 23, 2023

VLORE, Albania — Children on a school outing to the National Museum of Independence in this coastal city form a ring around me.

“What is your name?” asks a self-assured girl, who seems to be the captain of a team of girlfriends, all around 10. I reply, “Linda.”

A rascally boy steals the question ball from the girls, asking, “How old are you?” But before I could answer, his pal said, “You are beautiful.” He scores with me.

The questions in good English kept coming. I have answered some of the same questions from children who have approached me on trips worldwide. A few asked, “Do you like Albania?” For that question, substitute Albania for France, Egypt or Argentina.

But these children had a few questions that reflected one of Albania’s urgent problems: youth migration.

One boy repeatedly asked me in German if I spoke German. Another asked me in English, “Which is the best country? Albania or Germany? My brother lives in Germany.”

My husband and I were visiting Albania with the Association of European Journalists, holding its annual congress in Vlore in late October.

Simone Rapple, a member of the AEJ’s Irish section, told me that one girl in the group asked her, “Can you help Albania?”

Help is coming to Albania from foreign investment, a boom in seasonal tourism and support from the World Bank for agriculture, which employs 36 percent of the population. Also, a gusher of funds for public coffers may come from the government’s contract with Shell, which has been conducting oil and gas exploration in the Shpirag region for several years.

But the country — especially in the northern highlands — continues to empty out, according to The Borgen Project, a Tacoma, Washington-based nonprofit group addressing poverty and hunger worldwide.

In a 2022 report titled “Why Are Albanian Migrants Leaving Albania?,” the group found that about 70 percent of Albanian asylum seekers chose the United Kingdom or France. Men go first, followed by women and children.

Eighty-three percent of asylum seekers cited the high cost of living, unemployment (the unemployment rate for 18- to 34-year-olds is 60 percent), exacerbated by the earthquake of 2019, the COVID pandemic, and political instability and corruption, according to the report.

On May 8, The Tirana Times, citing the latest data published by Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency, reported that Albanians led the list of people who were found to have broken EU member states’ migration rules and were consequently deported in 2022. They ranked second among those denied entry to the EU.

The lack of opportunities has also bred crime. The Borgen Group’s report said, “Boys are being groomed by criminal gangs. Albanian-originated crime networks aim to recruit males mainly to work illegally on UK cannabis farms. Some men fled to escape from local blood feuds still common in Albania.”

On my brief trip to Albania, I saw that coastal tourism provides employment to youths and transforms economies in Vlore and Durres, two port cities on the so-called Albanian Riviera.

In Durres, I watched young men and women park their Mercedes-Benzes in front of the venerable Hotel Epidam & Spa and spend afternoons at its sidewalk cafe. Other cafes and restaurants along Epidam Boulevard were doing brisk, post-tourist season business.

On a midweek evening, my husband and I dined at Meison Bistro & Market, a gleaming and excellent restaurant on the town’s sea-facing main road. It was packed, and Alessia Demiri, one of the owners, told me, “We are a family of fishermen, and we are blessed.”

The port of Durres — prized over the centuries by its Roman, Ottoman, Venetian and Soviet occupiers — is getting increased cruise ship and Italian ferry traffic. Vlore is set to get a city-center marina with 25,833 square feet of residential and retail space. The marina will have many yacht berths, which is golden for year-round tourism.

Albania is still slogging through the EU membership process. That — as I have seen in the neighboring member state of Croatia — will lift multiple sectors of its economy, providing jobs that will keep the kids on the farms and elsewhere.

As my husband and I stood in line, waiting to board our flight from Tirana to Frankfurt, I heard a slim blond mother talking to her child, seated in a travel stroller, in an unmistakable Alabama accent.

“Are you traveling home?” I asked. She replied that she was visiting her parents in Alabama but she lives in Albania.

“I miss home, but Albania is a safe place to raise children,” she said.

Sweet home, Albania.

Linda Gasparello is co-host and producer of “White House Chronicle” on PBS. She wrote this for InsideSources.com.

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