Albanian PM Berisha blames opposition for election unrest

Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha yesterday played down pre-election violence and blamed the opposition for the tense atmosphere ahead of today’s local polls. “This electoral campaign was calmer (than before). There have been incidents but no...

Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha yesterday played down pre-election violence and blamed the opposition for the tense atmosphere ahead of today’s local polls.

“This electoral campaign was calmer (than before). There have been incidents but no deaths,” he told AFP in an interview yesterday.

“I think that everything will be fine (on election day).”

After deadly political violence earlier in the year, the run-up to the polls has seen unrest. Official police figures say there have been over 60 incidents, including three cases of car bombings and around a dozen fights between party militants.

Since the fall of communism in the early 1990s, polls in Albania have regularly been marred by violence and the results contested.

The international community considers the polls a test of the volatile Balkan country’s stability. Over 5,000 local and international observers will monitor the elections.

Analysts fear the results could still be hotly contested. The opposition Socialist Party of Tirana mayor Edi Rama treats the vote as a referendum on the legitimacy of the right-wing government.

Berisha, who has been at the centre of Albanian politics since the collapse of communism, blamed the opposition for driving up the stakes of the vote contributing to tensions. “For me these are really local elections... we want to win but if we don’t it is not fatal,” he said.

“Every country has its problems and here we have an opposition leader who wants power at any price... who does not respect the results of the vote.”

Albania has been in political stalemate since parliamentary elections in June 2009, rejected by the opposition which accused the ruling right-wing Democratic Party of electoral fraud and demanded a recount of the vote.

The crisis reached its peak in January, when four people were killed and several were injured at an anti-government protest in Tirana. Seven of the elite Republican Guards were briefly detained in connection with the deaths but only one is still in custody as a probe into the incidents continues.

Rama, for his part, dismissed the entire government probe into the killings as “a farcical episode of an ongoing soap opera”.

He is running for his fourth term as mayor of Tirana, which is one of the most keenly contested cities today. Rama has already announced that he would contest the results if they are not truthful, and does not rule out calling new mass protests.

In Fushe-Kruga, a village some 17 kilometres north of Tirana, where the flags of the competing parties flutter in the wind, voters were weary of politicians.

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