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Republic of Albania
Land area: 10,579 sq mi
(27,400 sq km); total area:
11,100 sq mi (28,748 sq km)
Population (2006 est.):
3,581,655 (growth rate: 0.5%);
birth rate: 15.1/1000; infant
mortality rate: 20.8/1000; life
expectancy: 77.4; density per sq
mi: 339
Capital
and largest city (2003 est.):
Tirana, 353,400
Other large cities: Durres,
113,900; Elbasan, 97,000
Monetary unit: Lek
Languages: Albanian (Tosk is
the official dialect), Greek
Ethnicity/race: Albanian
95%, Greeks 3%, other 2%: Vlachs,
Gypsies, Serbs, and Bulgarians
(1989 est.)
Religions: Islam 70%,
Albanian Orthodox 20%, Roman
Catholic 10% (est.)
Literacy rate: 87% (2003
est.)
Economic
summary:GDP/PPP
(2005 est.): $18.07 billion; per
capita $4,900. Real growth
rate: 5.5%. Inflation:
2.4%. Unemployment: 14.3%
official rate, but may exceed
30%. Arable land: 20.1%.
Agriculture: wheat, corn,
potatoes, vegetables, fruits,
sugar beets, grapes; meat, dairy
products. Labor force:
1.09 million (not including
352,000 emigrant workers);
agriculture 58%, nonagricultural
private sector 19%, public
sector 23% (2004 est.).
Industries: food processing,
textiles and clothing; lumber,
oil, cement, chemicals, mining,
basic metals, hydropower.
Natural resources:
petroleum, natural gas, coal,
bauxite, chromite, copper, iron
ore, nickel, salt, timber,
hydropower. Exports:
$650.1 million f.o.b. (2005
est.): textiles and footwear;
asphalt, metals and metallic
ores, crude oil; vegetables,
fruits, tobacco. Imports:
$2.473 billion f.o.b. (2005
est.): machinery and equipment,
foodstuffs, textiles, chemicals.
Major trading partners:
Italy, Canada, Germany, Greece,
Turkey (2004).
Communications: Telephones:
main lines in use: 255,000
(2003); mobile cellular: 1.1
million (2003). Radio
broadcast stations: AM 13,
FM 46 (3 national, 62 local),
shortwave 1 (2005).
Television broadcast stations:
65 (3 national, 62 local);
note - 2 cable networks (2005).
Internet hosts: 749
(2005). Internet users:
75,000 (2005).
Transportation: Railways:
total: 447 km (2004).
Highways: total: 18,000 km;
paved: 5,400 km; unpaved: 12,600
km (2002). Waterways: 43
km (2006). Ports and harbors:
Durres, Sarande, Shengjin,
Vlore. Airports: 11
(2005).
International disputes: the
Albanian Government calls for
the protection of the rights of
ethnic Albanians in neighboring
countries, and the peaceful
resolution of interethnic
disputes; some ethnic Albanian
groups in neighboring countries
advocate for a "greater
Albania," but the idea has
little appeal among Albanian
nationals; thousands of
unemployed Albanians emigrate
annually to nearby Italy and
other developed countries.
Albania is situated on the eastern
shore of the Adriatic Sea, with
Montenegro and Serbia to the north,
Macedonia to the east, and Greece to the
south. Slightly larger than Maryland,
Albania is composed of two major
regions: a mountainous highland region
(north, east, and south) constituting
70% of the land area, and a western
coastal lowland region that contains
nearly all of the country's agricultural
land and is the most densely populated
part of Albania.
A part of Illyria in ancient times
and later of the Roman Empire, Albania
was ruled by the Byzantine Empire from
535 to 1204. An alliance (1444–1466) of
Albanian chiefs failed to halt the
advance of the Ottoman Turks, and the
country remained under at least nominal
Turkish rule for more than four
centuries, until it proclaimed its
independence on Nov. 28, 1912.
Largely agricultural, Albania is one
of the poorest countries in Europe. A
battlefield in World War I, after the
war it became a republic in which a
conservative Muslim landlord, Ahmed Zogu,
proclaimed himself president in 1925 and
king (Zog I) in 1928. He ruled until
Italy annexed Albania in 1939. Communist
guerrillas under Enver Hoxha seized
power in 1944, near the end of World War
II. Hoxha was a devotee of Stalin,
emulating the Soviet leader's repressive
tactics, imprisoning or executing
landowners and others who did not
conform to the socialist ideal. Hoxha
eventually broke with Soviet communism
in 1961 because of differences with
Khrushchev and then aligned himself with
Chinese communism, which he also
abandoned in 1978 after the death of
Mao. From then on Albania went its own
way to forge its individual version of
the socialist state and became one of
the most isolated—and economically
underdeveloped—countries in the world.
Hoxha was succeeded by Ramiz Alia in
1982.
Elections in March 1991 gave the
Communists a decisive majority. But a
general strike and street demonstrations
soon forced the all-Communist cabinet to
resign. In June 1991 the Communist Party
of Labor renamed itself the Socialist
Party and renounced its past ideology.
The opposition Democratic Party won a
landslide victory in the 1992 elections,
and Sali Berisha, a former cardiologist,
became Albania's first elected
president. The following year,
ex-Communists, including Ramiz Alia and
former prime minister Fatos Nano, were
imprisoned on corruption charges.
But Albania's experiment with
democratic reform and a free-market
economy went disastrously awry in March
1997, when large numbers of its citizens
invested in shady get-rich-quick pyramid
schemes. When five of these schemes
collapsed in the beginning of the year,
robbing Albanians of an estimated $1.2
billion in savings, Albanians' rage
turned against the government, which
appeared to have sanctioned the
nationwide swindle. Rioting broke out,
the country's fragile infrastructure
collapsed, and gangsters and rebels
overran the country, plunging it into
virtual anarchy. A multinational
protection force eventually restored
order and set up the elections that
formally ousted President Sali Berisha.
In spring 1999, Albania was heavily
involved in the affairs of its fellow
ethnic Albanians to the north, in
Kosovo. Albania served as an outpost for
NATO troops and took in approximately
440,000 Kosovar refugees, about half the
total number of ethnic Albanians who
were driven from their homes in Kosovo.
Ilir Meta, elected prime minister in
1999, rapidly moved forward in his first
years to modernize the economy,
privatize business, fight crime, and
reform the judiciary and tax systems. He
resigned in Jan. 2002, frustrated by
political infighting. In June 2002,
former general Alfred Moisiu was elected
president, endorsed by both the
Socialists (headed by Fatos Nano) and
the Democrats (led by Sali Berisha) in
an effort to end the unproductive
political fractiousness that has
stalemated the government. The political
duel between Nano and Berisha continued,
however, and little improvement was
evident in the standard of living for
Albanians. In 2005 elections, Berisha
replaced Nano as prime minister.
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