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- <text id=91TT0724>
- <title>
- Apr. 08, 1991: Campaigning, Albanian-Style
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 08, 1991 The Simple Life
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 40
- THE BALKANS
- Campaigning, Albanian-Style
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After decades of isolation, communism has failed here too. Now,
- in agony and expectation, the country goes to the polls for
- its first free elections.
- </p>
- <p>By James L. Graff/Tirana
- </p>
- <p> Donkeys laden with firewood shambled about aimlessly
- among the crowd in the shabby central square in Mamuras, 19 mi.
- north of the Albanian capital of Tirana. The townsfolk's
- timeless talk about rain, marriages and hardship had given way
- to the excitement of an epochal event: the country's first free
- elections. "We want the same things as the rest of Europe--freedom to go where we like, to work hard and to secure our
- future," said Shaban Sula, 37, who works on a nearby collective
- farm. But in Mamuras, where Europe seems like a distant
- continent, his words betrayed a wistfulness born of generations
- of cultural and political isolation.
- </p>
- <p> If any communist regime was in a position to fend off the
- wave of popular revolt that has washed over Europe in the past
- two years, the Party of Labor of Albania seemed the best bet.
- Since coming to power in 1944, Albania's communists have gone
- to great lengths to avoid all compromising entanglements with
- the outside world. Enver Hoxha, socialist Albania's founder,
- rejected all contact with the West and broke ranks with
- communist allies in Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union and China when
- they deviated from strict orthodoxy.
- </p>
- <p> But after a tense year of inching back from total
- hegemony, the ruling party this week was forced to put its power
- to the test against the surging opposition Democratic Party,
- established only three months ago, and three smaller independent
- parties. While the final tally might not be clear for weeks, the
- problems so long glossed over by communist rhetoric were
- painfully obvious to voters: severe food and housing shortages,
- primitive health care, woefully outdated factories, an almost
- nonexistent service sector and a ramshackle economy that left
- even basic needs unfulfilled.
- </p>
- <p> For many of Albania's 3.2 million people, the elections
- alone offered insufficient hope of change. Less than a week
- before the voting, thousands gathered in the port city of
- Durres, drawn by fantastic rumors of waiting ships, including
- a ferryboat bound for Boston. Police fired automatic weapons
- over the heads of a stone-throwing throng trying to storm the
- harbor; 29 people, including 12 police, were reported injured.
- Earlier in March some 20,000 Albanians had scrambled aboard any
- boat bound for the nearest ports in Italy, and thousands more
- are desperate to leave.
- </p>
- <p> Although the two major parties differ on the pace and
- scope of the change they hope to achieve, both say progress can
- come only through a market economy buttressed by massive aid
- from Europe and the U.S. President Ramiz Alia, head of the
- Party of Labor since Hoxha's death in 1985, made tentative moves
- toward reform early last year, when he pledged to break the
- stranglehold of party management and introduced limited price
- reforms. After a series of mass demonstrations in December, the
- government allowed the formation of opposition parties.
- </p>
- <p> The communists carried out their campaign in the old
- style, strong on meetings of party cadres but nearly invisible
- in the streets. By contrast, the Democrats, who took their
- campaign directly to the people even in remote towns, pledged
- to introduce privatization through shock therapy, breaking up
- the country's agricultural collectives and allowing immediate
- land sales. Industrial conglomerates would be cut up into
- smaller chunks that could be bought and sold, even by
- foreigners. Democratic party co-leader Gramoz Pasko promised
- that Albania would be the first Balkan country after Greece to
- join the European Community.
- </p>
- <p> That prospect seems wildly remote. Albania is the poorest
- country in Europe, with an average monthly wage of less than
- $70. Private-car ownership, recently allowed by the government,
- is virtually unknown. Some 65% of the population lives in the
- countryside, still shaken by the collectivization of the last
- remnants of private livestock in 1981. While Albania's
- population grew at an average annual rate of 2.1% in the past
- decade, the number of livestock was the same in 1990 as it was
- in 1980.
- </p>
- <p> Meat is rationed to one kilogram per family per week; in
- many parts of the countryside, people get only one kilogram a
- month. Says Nikolle Llesh Doda, 29, who lives with his wife and
- baby son in a two-room house in the tiny village of Vau i
- Denhes: "Fifteen years ago, we were all putting more and better
- food on our tables."
- </p>
- <p> At a tractor factory on the outskirts of Tirana, 4,200
- workers toil on machines that have been in use since the 1940s,
- converting scrap metal into tractor parts. Now mass layoffs
- loom. Production and wages have been slashed for lack of raw
- materials. "We're terrified that we'll be left with no money,"
- says Gezime Sula. Nevertheless, she supports the Democrats, even
- though an unbridled marketplace would almost certainly close the
- factory gates.
- </p>
- <p> Albania's agony is likely to deepen as it undergoes the
- wrenching retooling of its economy. The tense peace that
- prevailed during the campaign could dissipate as a divided
- People's Assembly wrestles with intractable problems--and
- heightened expectations. Free elections were Albania's shaky
- bridge to the world, assuring the restoration last month of
- formal relations with the U.S. after a break of 52 years. But
- crossing that bridge will demand great patience from Albanians
- and considerable aid from those on the other side.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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