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Showing posts with label Albania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Albania. Show all posts

Friday, January 3, 2025

Corruption is Everywhere > Especially in Zelensky's Ukraine and, perhaps, NATO; Hospital workers in the Netherlands with fake credentials; Albania bans TokTok

 

Zelensky’s corruption has ruined Ukraine

– opposition leader

The “attempted bribe” of Slovak PM Robert Fico has exposed Kiev’s criminality, exiled politician Viktor Medvedchuk claims
Zelensky’s corruption has ruined Ukraine – opposition leader











An “attempted bribe” of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has exposed Vladimir Zelensky’s corruption and the criminal nature of the Ukraine conflict, exiled Ukrainian opposition leader Viktor Medvedchuk has said.

Last week, Fico revealed that Zelensky offered him €500 million ($520 million) in exchange for support for Ukrainian membership to NATO. Zelensky confirmed the offer, which he claimed could compensate the people of Slovakia for the loss of Russian gas supplies, which Kiev insists it will cut off on January 31st.

Medvedchuk – who was ousted from Ukraine in 2022 – believes the episode exemplifies the “corrupt nature” of Zelensky's rule, and has urged the EU to investigate the Ukrainian leader for attempted bribery.

Securing NATO membership would shield Zelensky from bearing responsibility for “losing the war” with Russia, Medvedchuk said in a blog post on Friday, and as such he will spare no effort in pushing for it, including through criminal methods.

After Fico’s rebuttal of Zelensky's offer, the Ukrainian leader “found no better way forward than to accuse the Slovak prime minister of corruption,” Medvedchuk wrote.

Zelensky has claimed that Fico is pursuing “shady deals” with Russia for his own personal benefit, after he traveled to Moscow last week for negotiations with President Vladimir Putin.

Zelensky offered to pay €500 million from Russian sovereign funds that have been frozen by Western nations, which Kiev claims it has a right to use, according to Fico. Medvedchuk said he believes the Ukrainian leader could just as easily pay the “bribe” out of his own pocket. Zelensky has embezzled significant amounts of money while running the country, critics claim.

“Obviously, Fico is not the only one who was offered money in this fashion. How else would one explain the info-campaign in Europe in support of corrupt Zelensky?” the exiled politician claimed.

”Zelensky has exposed a huge graft scheme stretching all across Europe,” Medvedchuk went on to say. “The entire Ukraine conflict is based on one large corrupt scheme that involves leading parties and politicians in Europe and the US.”

Western politicians that support Kiev are afraid that after they are voted out of power, the new leaders will “find out that they had been robbing their own people under the guise of helping Zelensky’s Ukraine,” Medvedchuk said.

Common sense and 'doing the right thing' come nowhere close to explaining the West's determination to keep the war in Ukraine going as long as they can.




Dutch healthcare workers claim hundreds of colleagues have fake diplomas, no training


Hundreds of healthcare workers in the Netherlands report colleagues using falsified credentials to care for vulnerable patients, raising serious concerns about neglect and potential criminal activity, according to an investigation by RTL Nieuws. Workers described witnessing unqualified staff, often temporary or independent contractors filling staffing gaps, resorting to online videos to learn basic medical procedures like inserting catheters.

The investigation found that these incidents frequently occur during night shifts when staffing is stretched thin. Permanent staff members told RTL Nieuws that some temporary workers appeared more focused on earning quick money than providing proper patient care. Trade unions representing healthcare workers are demanding urgent action from employers to verify credentials and prevent unqualified individuals from accessing patients.

The ongoing labor shortage means freelance healthcare workers and independent contractors can clear up to 12,000 euros per month when working at various facilities without regard to their own well-being. They take double shifts, work with a short turnaround from overnight hours to daytime hours, and sometimes stay on for seven straight days with consequences like missing pages and falling asleep on the job.

In November, police told RTL Nieuws that the sky-high wage has caused an “alarming” increase in fraud among healthcare workers. That led to the survey of over 2,800 people, which was conducted with help from the FNV and NU’91 labor unions.

Some 643 employees said they were certain colleagues were working with false credentials, and 607 more said that was a high probability. The survey conducted by RTL Nieuws found that 17 percent know one of their colleagues has a falsified diploma, and another 19 percent suspect that to be the case.

“When inserting a catheter, the patient was in a lot of pain, I just saw blood from below,” said a nursing home healthcare worker about one worker who was found to be lacking in professional training.

About 10 percent know a colleague who has a job without the required listing in the BIG registry, while 16 percent suspect this possibility. About 9 percent know a colleague without the required good conduct certification from their background check, while an additional 18 percent believe this to be true.

“The higher-ups said that a manager left because he committed fraud. On LinkedIn, I saw that he simply works at another institution,” said one person who works with people with physical disabilities.

“Dangerous situations arise because of untrained staff,” said another worker providing care for people with disabilities. “A resident took a knife from the kitchen and wanted to stab another.”

“The numbers are alarmingly high and these are really the most vulnerable patients and clients,” concluded NU'91 chair Femke Merel van Kooten. “Clients who come into contact with these people cannot always defend themselves or say, ‘Hey, something is wrong.’”

One colleague spoke of a freelancer who locked the lower portion of a hoist in a position that was too high. “The client would then fall. I said, ‘What are you doing?’ That’s the first thing you learn.”

FNV union leader Saida Youssef could not comprehend why employers might not sufficiently screen their workers. “It is simply terrible that this is happening under our noses in 2024 and that we actually have no control over it,” she said late last year to the news outlet. It is not only dangerous for clients, but also for employees, she asserted. “You put them in very unpleasant situations.”






Albania bans TikTok for ‘perversity’


Critics have accused the Albanian government of political censorship
NATO member bans TikTok for ‘perversity’











Albania is about to enact a year-long ban on TikTok in the name of protecting children and teens. However, critics of Prime Minister Edi Rama claim his real aim is to silence the political opposition ahead of an election in May, according to Reuters.

Rama announced the ban in late December, after what he said were weeks of consultations with parents and teachers. He said the decision was motivated by the fatal stabbing of a 14-year-old boy in November over a social media dispute. TikTok has objected, pointing out that neither the victim nor the attacker had used the platform.

“This creates a dangerous precedent that at any moment governments can close different platforms,” Orkidea Xhaferaj of SciDEV told Reuters, a Tirana-based think tank funded by George Soros’ Open Society Foundation and a variety of Western governments.

“He wants to close our mouth,” Arlind Qori, leader of the political party Bashke (Together), told the agency, describing TikTok as a powerful communication tool of the opposition.

The leaders of Albania’s two largest opposition parties, Sali Berisha (Democratic Party) and Ilir Meta (Freedom Party) have been charged with corruption. They have decried the charges as politically motivated.

Businessman Ergus Katiaj also lamented the upcoming ban, saying it will deprive him of free advertising that adds around $1,000 to his monthly profits. Katiaj posts on TikTok every evening, reminding customers in Tirana that his shop delivers alcohol, cigarettes and snacks all night.

Rama’s government said the ban would go into effect “in early 2025,” but TikTok remains online as of Thursday.

“The ban on TikTok for one year in Albania is not a rushed reaction to a single incident, but a carefully considered decision made in consultation with parent communities in schools across the country,” the prime minister said in December.

After 1,300 such meetings, 90% of educators and parents supported the TikTok ban, the government told AP.

They had 1300 meetings in a matter of weeks? Wow! How did educators have time to educate?

“Inside China’s TikTok, you don't see hooliganism, perversity, violence, bullying, crime,” Rama said in last month’s speech announcing the ban, referring to the platform Douyin. “Why do we need this?”

Both TikTok and its Chinese counterpart Douyin were developed by ByteDance, a company incorporated in the Cayman Islands.

The Chinese origin of the video-sharing platform has placed it in the crosshairs of many governments in the West. The US passed a law last year requiring ByteDance to sell TikTok in the name of national security, with a January 19 deadline.

Romania annulled its presidential elections in November after intelligence agencies claimed “Russian influence” was behind a TikTok campaign supporting independent candidate Calin Georgescu. The decision was not reversed even after it emerged that the campaign had been manipulated by the pro-Western National Liberal Party instead.

This is obviously a political gimmick. It would be great if it somehow reduces online child sexual abuse, but it is doubtful that it will have much effect. 




Monday, May 15, 2017

Albania's Hyper-Corruption Threatens Regional Peace and Stability in Balkans

Here’s why Albania is a failed state
Adam Garrie, The Duran

Abanian Prime Minister Edi Rama

With many eyes on Macedonia’s political situation which has been made worse by foreign interventions from the EU and NATO which both support the Tirana Platform which would effectively destroy the unity of the Macedonian state, internal events in Albania itself may soon jeopardise stability in the region.

Protests throughout Albania have been going on for months as the main opposition Democratic Party and other activists have called for the Prime Minister Edi Rama to resign prior to elections scheduled for 18 June, 2017 . Many want a technocratic government to oversee the process, having lost all faith in democracy.

We have reached an impasse wherein self-proclaimed Albanian democrats no longer trust that their country is democratic. Impartial observers have been warning of this for years.

Kruje, Albania - was the capitol city in the middle ages

Albania has a population of under 3 million people about 60% of whom are Muslim (Sunni) and 17% Christian. At one point under communism, Albania was declared the world's first atheist state. Since the collapse of communism, religion has returned. Albanians are believed to be involved in a significant amount of human trafficking as portrayed in the movie "Taken". 

One can tell that the genie is fully out of the bottle when even the neo-liberal Financial Times admits that half of Albania’s GDP comes from drug sales and cultivation.

The truth of the matter is that Albania is a narco-state, built on top of a mafia state where the illegal drugs trade, organ trade, weapons trade, human trafficking and blatant corruption are the guided forces of business in both the private and public sectors.

The fact that this impoverished, broken state has imperialist ambitions, threatening to annex neighbouring states including parts Serbia, Macedonia, Greece and Montenegro is not only illegal and irresponsible but also deeply frightening.

Many in Albania are openly calling for a ‘Greater Albania’ which would encompass the sovereign territories of each aforementioned nation. But as it stands, Albanian leaders cannot even run the state that they have according to its current borders.

Actually, from their perspective they may be running the state just fine.

A lengthy report from a US based anti-corruption website, citing a variety of mostly western sources has found that corruption exists at almost every level of the Albanian state, including in private business dealings.

The EU is all rather confused about this. Albania’s corrupt mafioso elite are staunchly pro-EU and Albania is an enthusiastic member of NATO.

Some realists in the EU however realise that Albania’s cringe-worthy levels of corruption would be an economic and security disaster for the EU. More worryingly though, many EU officials prefer to look the other way or simply lie about the dire situation in order to continue promulgating a narrative that Albania is an EU country in the making.

While the EU itself is deeply corrupt, Albania’s corruption is far more ‘old school’ in the sense that money talks and when it doesn’t, the bullets do the talking.

Albania’s terrorist proxies and violent separatists threaten to break up Macedonia and violate Serbia’s territorial integrity. When one realises that these people cannot control their own country, it puts things into perspective. The perspective is in a word: grim.


Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Old Albania - Sworn Virgins, A Completely Different Take on Gender Fluidity

The last bastion of 'sworn virgins': Albania

Briseida Mema and Nicolas Gaudichet


Shkurtan Hasanpapaj, 84, is one of Albania's last "sworn virgins", women who become honorary men, taking on the role of the man in their community

At the age of 16, living in a remote village in northern Albania, Shkurta Hasanpapaj faced being forced into marriage.

There was just one way out, and the young woman grasped it: she took the ancient, gender-bending oath to become a "sworn virgin".

At a stroke, her life changed. She renounced sex, married life and parenthood. But in return, she won the right to live as a man and lead her family in a fiercely patriarchal society.

Nearly seven decades later, Hasanpapaj prefers to go by the male form of her name, Shkurtan.

"I chose to be with the men," she said, as short white hair poked from beneath a cap.

"Those who like me call me Shkurtan, those who want to offend me use Shkurta."

Seeing out the end of her life in a hospice in the northwestern city of Shkodra, Hasanpapaj is among the last of the sworn virgins -- a social status once common in Albania and its neighbours in the Balkans.

Today experts estimate that fewer than 10 remain.

The exceptional life of the sworn virgin is rooted in the Kanun of Leke Dukagjini, a mediaeval code of conduct that was passed down orally among the clans of the craggy peaks and verdant valleys of northern Albania.

The Kanun, which also lays out the rules for the nation's notorious blood feuds, allows two ways to become a "virgjinesha", as sworn virgins are called in Albanian.

One possibility is when all males in the family are dead or gone, and a girl takes the oath in order to take over male duties and rights.

The other is to invoke it to peacefully avoid an arranged marriage. Without the oath, blood can be shed.

Refusing a proposal is seen as a major affront that can ignite a feud between the families of the would-be bride and suitor that can span generations.

You don't have to "serve food with your head bowed" 

Sworn virgins win the right to hold a job, smoke, knock back shots of fiery raki liquor at the bar, wear trousers and even make family decisions.

You don't have to "serve food with your head bowed" and "disappear without looking at the guests", said 62-year-old Djana Rakipi, who also goes by Lali.

She was born in the remote Tropoja region in northern Albania, but now lives on the coast in Durres.

Dressed in a tie and military beret -- Rakipi chainsmokes, has a crushing handshake and takes clear pleasure when the guard at the local port calls her "boss".

Rakipi said that, for her, the oath was a form of liberty. The alternative path laid out for women in the Kanun is one of subservience, hard domestic labour and total lack of control.

"It was difficult for women to be part of life," said Rakipi. "Being free was taboo."


- 'They mixed with men' -

For Hasanpapaj the pressure to change came early. She and her twin sister, born in 1932, were seen as a catastrophe by their parents who had already had three sons die. Her sister was named Sose -- "That's enough" in Albanian.

Her sister was named Sose -- "That's enough" in Albanian

During the post-World War II communist regime of Enver Hoxha, Hasanpapaj was a leader of the local branch of the communist party and headed up "a brigade of about 50 farmers".

"I was tough," she said.

Rakipi also feels nostalgia for the communist regime "that always recognised me as a man", worked as a soldier training students to assemble a Kalashnikov rifle. She later became a police officer.

Much like Hasanpapaj, Rakipi says "she doesn't give a damn" about not having kids and brushed off the matters of sex and relationships.

"I am in love with nature, the sun. I paint," Rakipi said. "What better love is there than that?"

"Two men (or) two women getting married,
that is the end of the world,"

Both these sworn virgins firmly reject homosexuality. With Rakipi saying it is "not moral".

"Two men and two women getting married, that is the end of the world," she added.

For British anthropologist Antonia Young, author of a book on sworn virgins, sexuality had nothing to do with the custom.

The "virgjinesha" gained the privilege of being admitted into a male-only world, although their gender was never changed on their birth certificates.

"They were definitely within the masculine world. They mixed with men, they socialised with men, they drank with them, particularly in cafes," she said.

For any women today who may be tempted to taking the oath of becoming a sworn virgin, much of the significance of the act will be lost as so much has changed in Albanian society, said Young.

"It won't be the same -- it won't be for the benefit of the family or the community," she said. "It would just be for individual choice."

Sunday, May 10, 2015

Macedonia Blames Kosovans for Kumanovo Clashes Killing 8 Officers

From BBC Europe
Police officers run across a street in Kumanovo, Macedonia, 9 May 2015
Macedonia says five Kosovans led the armed group which was involved in clashes with security forces in the northern town of Kumanovo.

Eight officers were killed and 37 injured, as well as 14 gunmen, Interior ministry spokesman Ivo Kotevski said.

Those named were members of the now dismantled Kosovo Liberation Army.

Mr Kotevski said the threat in Kumanovo, near the Serbian-Kosovan border, had been "eliminated" and a large amount of weapons seized.

Last month, about 40 ethic Albanians from Kosovo briefly took over a Macedonian police station in the village of Gosince near the border, demanding the creation of an Albanian state in Macedonia.

Map showing Kumanovo in Macedonia
In 2001, rebels demanding greater rights for the ethnic Albanian minority launched an uprising against the government, and tensions have continued despite a peace deal.

About a quarter of Macedonia's two million population are ethnic Albanians.

Men in uniforms

Sami Ukshini, Beg Rizaj, Dem Shehu, Muhamet Krasniqi and Mirsad Ndrecaj were the leaders of the armed group that clashed with police in a suburb of Kumanovo, some 40km (25 miles) north of the capital, Skopje on Saturday, the interior ministry spokesman said.

Only one of the 14 uniformed bodies had been identified - that of another Kosovo national, named Xhafer Zymberi, said the spokesman.

"More than 30 terrorists, mainly Macedonian nationals and one from Albania, surrendered yesterday [Saturday] to the police forces," he added.

Ethnic Albanians in the village of Studenicani pray during the funeral of
Isamedin Osmani, one of the police officers killed in the Kumanovo operation
An elderly woman is evacuated in an armoured vehicle near a police
checkpoint in Kumanovo, Macedonia May 10, 2015
People on bicycles pass in front of the Government building where the national
flags are lowered at half mast, in Skopje, Macedonia May 10, 2015
They would face Macedonian justice, Prime Minister Nikola Gruevski said. The group had tried to destabilise the country, he said, after paying tribute to the security forces.

His government is already under pressure over claims of illegal wire-tapping and police brutality.

The opposition and the government have accused each other of deliberately destabilising the country.

Nato Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said he was following the situation with "great concern" and urged all sides to "exercise restraint and avoid any further escalation, in the interest of the country and the whole region".

Earlier, the European Commission issued a similar call.

Macedonia, which is a candidate for European Union membership, is observing two days of mourning.