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Title: Albania, Laboratory of Subversion
Language: en
Source: Retrieved on January 25, 2017 from http://digitalelephant.blogspot.com/2010/08/albania-laboratory-of-subversion.html
Notes: Original title: Albania: laboratorio della sovversione  1st English edition 1999  Translated by Jean Weir in collaboration with John Moore and Leigh Starcross 

Albania, Laboratory of Subversion

Introduction

Incontestable in its spontaneous and destructive extension, the

insurrection in course has taken everyone by surprise.

Not least the men and structures of power. When such a profoundly

subversive movement surges forth and spreads, the instability and

precariousness of State order becomes quite evident. Suddenly appearing

at various points it spreads like an oil stain and, fruit of so many

contradictions, cannot be stopped as some good people maintain simply

with a few well-aimed gunshots.

People find it hard to grasp what is taking place in a world where

everything has become uncertain. Will they be able to take a bus? Find a

post office open? Get to work (anyone who has a job)? Continue to wait

patiently in the food queue at the door of some church?

Anarchists are also taken by surprise. They are elsewhere, spread

throughout the world, busy going into theories or distinguishing

themselves from each other on the basis of metaphysical levels of

reciprocal impurity. So they have other things to think about.

Insurrection is knocking at the door but they are deaf to it, slow to

act.

And, being no exception to the rule, the incredible Albanian

insurrection is full of surprises. With one difference. Power knows what

needs to be done at the international level. The insurgents also know

what to do, at least at the immediate level. After all, for anyone with

any sense doing something is the first thing that comes to mind when

they find themselves faced with an unforeseen event, whether it gives

rise to fear or opens one’s heart to the greatest of hopes.

But really knowing what to do is not so easy.

Although not quite immediate, Power’s response at both local and

international level has been that of defending its own interests.

Knowing that it will have to give up its position sooner or later, the

ruling party is doing everything to put that off for as long as

possible, so that their strategic retreat can become a starting point

for a mass return to the seats they had to abandon.

At the international level the gendarmes’ boss, the US, has decided it

will be the nations most directly interested in the future economic

development of Albania to see to things this time: Italy, Greece and

Turkey. Italy, which has always played a role in Albania’s ignoble past

history, has accepted this task willingly, perhaps for no other reason

than to get an opportunity flex its muscles. First, by sinking a ship

full of people and drowning them without batting an eyelid; then running

the cruiser that was the pride of the navy aground and leaving it

stranded on the beach, crammed full of refugees who were trying to leave

the country.

These blunders aside, police operations are a routine for any

government, and that is what this has become. Bosses of every kind, from

the small proprietor of a hat factory who paid “his” workers a fifth of

what he would have done in Italy, to the great administrators of the

world economy (with the never sufficiently lauded Bank of Rome in the

lead), have shared the money rashly invested by the Albanians over the

two years between themselves.

But let’s take a closer look at this money that so much has been said

about. Through its international intermediaries, in the first place

American, the Bank of Rome had been entrusted with a huge sum of money

following promises of ridiculously high levels of interest. In fact, the

operation was perfect from a capitalist point of view. Some newspapers

likened it to “chain letters”, but the comparison does not fit. The game

depended on a far greater devaluation of Albanian money than actually

happened as a result of the brakes put on due to America’s political

concern. When the operation grew out of all proportion their inability

to pay interest moved things into the realm of common fraud.

The Albanian people, poverty-stricken as a consequence of the country’s

economic conditions, nevertheless had some small savings. Some even had

a fair amount from various dealings that recent changes in the

geo-political situation had made possible.

Everything poured into the coffers of the Bank of Rome and their

international accomplices. It was in response to this situation that the

first instances of rebellion broke out. I have heard the reprimands of

revolutionaries who cannot see what “tone” a revolt born from the desire

to get one’s money back can have. They obviously do not understand the

objective and subjective mechanisms that engender surprise, frustration,

disdain, hate, rebellion, and generalised insurrection.

I am not saying that these mechanisms can be explained once and for all.

When the breakdown occurs, everything spreads uncontrollably, and that

is what has happened.

But an insurrection is not a “pure” event. It cannot be seen as a linear

process that leads straight to victory (but what victory?), or retreats

and extinguishes itself in defeat (but what defeat?). Here lies the crux

of the problem.

The step from rebellion to generalised insurrection is not a simple one,

nor is it one that is devoid of consequences. Things do not move

spontaneously in one direction. Albania is no exception and after the

first days of the revolt and the assaults on the prisons and army

barracks, the rebels are gradually moving towards more moderate, broader

demands such as the nomination of a government, parliamentary elections,

the resignation of the director of State radio and television, as well

as all the normalising requests for personal protection (amnesty, no

proceedings against the insurgents, etc.).

We must look at this question for a moment as it is acquiring dimensions

of extreme and tragic importance. Many comrades think that the answer to

the problem “What is to be done?” in such cases is to participate in the

insurrectional movement directly themselves. In a word, move in the

opposite direction to the clandestine refugees: go over there, shoulder

the gun and play at who shoots first.

This idea is superficial, to say the least. You can’t turn up out of the

blue in a strange context without running the risk of being taken for an

enemy and hanged from the nearest lamp post. It is necessary to have

organisational contacts, even minimal ones, before events get underway.

We do not mean great operational structures, but it is certainly

necessary to know someone already, someone who is capable of

understanding what is actually happening.

This should not come as a surprise. Since the collapse of the Berlin

Wall the economic and political disintegration of the Russian empire has

produced, and will continue to produce, many situations similar to that

of Albania or Bosnia in the Balkans right along the whole Russian

border, and even within Russia itself.

Direct participation is only possible if there is a point of reference

on the spot to prevent it from turning out to be a disastrous failure

before it even begins. But could this, let’s say active, therefore armed

and conscious, revolutionary presence give any valid support to the

revolt during its swift transformation to generalised insurrection?

There is no simple answer to this. Some things can clearly be denounced

as soon as they come to light of course. These might be the formation of

gangs led by the leaders of the old power structures, the presence of

elements of the secret police (in the case of which no swearing of

loyalty can be considered valid), attempts to re-organise the

authoritarian political parties, right and left, control or repression

of the self-managed forms appearing in the field of services or

production, etc.

At the same time there needs to be a theoretical and practical

contribution, not just concerning strictly theoretical or political

questions (such as a detailed critique of the authoritarian structure of

the Communist Party or the no less authoritarian forms of democratic

governments), but also in order to make known structures that are

forming within the insurrectional movement elsewhere. Then, and only

then, will an international connection and an active participation of

insurrectionalist movements elsewhere in the world—which are different

but have similar characteristics—become possible.

I am not talking of specific organisations such as unions or workers’

councils but rather of an active presence, a co-ordinated participation

that can keep the theoretical value of the barricades alive and extend

them, as opposed to simply waiting for their flame to extinguish.

After all, isn’t the great desire of each one of us to find ourselves

prepared when the next revolt breaks out? What better then than to

contribute to making these revolts spread wherever they start up, as

well as revealing the premonitory signs of rage and hatred of

exploitation in all its forms, concretely, now?

Alfredo M. Bonanno

Rebibbia prison, July 1997

Insurrection and counter-insurrection in Albania (Chronology: January

— August 1997)

January

Demonstrations of protest file through the streets of Tirana and all

over the country. Since the beginning of the year, tens of thousands of

people have lost everything through a finance company going bankrupt.

This company, proposing fantastic interest rates (from 35% to 100% a

month), drew in funds from all over the country. Albanian people sold

everything they possessed in order to invest in the Sudë, Populi,

Xhaferri, Vefa, Kamberi societies and many others. With the collapse of

these financial enterprises, 70 to 80% of Albanian families suddenly

found themselves deprived of all their savings.

10 — The government begins to sue two large finance companies, Xhaferri

and Populi. In the meantime the World Bank and the International

Monetary fund intervene to put a brake on the speculation.

19 — In Tirana riot police intervene to disperse a crowd of over five

thousand furious people. The Socialist Party had asked people to

participate in this march in the hope of appointing themselves leaders

of a peaceful protest movement. But the demonstration, like those that

followed, was to make all the parties abandon any hope of controlling

this explosion of the people’s rage.

— In Berat, police, courts, ministerial and party office buildings are

stoned. Two hundred demonstrators are arrested. Parliament asks that the

army intervene to protect State buildings.

24 — In LushnjĂ« the town hall is set on fire during a demonstration. Two

thousand people build barricades to prevent the fire brigade from

intervening.

25 — In LushnjĂ«, the vice premier is beaten and held inside the town

stadium by force; the demonstrators ask for the head of a finance

society, Rrapush Xhaferri, in exchange for his freedom. Some journalists

are attacked by the crowd and robbed of their cameras, etc.

— Clashes take place in Berat and barricades are erected. The town hall

is burnt down and the crowd also try to set fire to the main police

station. Clashes also take place at Elbasan, Librazhd, Laç, Kuçovë,

Memaliaj and Tepelenë.

26 — Three thousand people attempt an assault on parliament following a

demonstration in Tirana. In Valona (Vlorë), a bomb is thrown at the

police during a protest march. The town hall is set on fire.

27 — In Tirana the army intervene patrolling the city streets.

— In Peshkopi about a hundred people attack the police station with

stones. Six policemen are killed, then the rebels set fire to the town

hall offices.

— In Gavaja prisoners in Barwhor prison begin a revolt which is later

suppressed. Two prisoners are killed.

28 — In Tirana, a demonstration in favour of the government is

organised.

29 — Berisha accuses the opposition party of organising the riots, and

arrests four militants. The government promises that repayment of

citizens will begin on February 5.

30 — Ten opposition parties form a coalition called the Forum for

Democracy, demanding Berisha’s resignation from the government as he is

considered responsible for the economic chaos, and the constitution of a

government of technocrats to manage the social crisis in the wait for

early elections.

February

1 — In Tirana, LushnjĂ« and Valona, seventy-three people are accused of

having provoked the January incidents.

5 — In Valona, the major finance company, Gjallica, declares itself

bankrupt. Following this news thirty thousand people come out into the

streets to demonstrate and to protest against the arrests carried out

the days previously. As the march makes its way to the port the police

charge and attempt to disperse the demonstrators with hydrants and

truncheons, then fire into the crowd killing two people and detaining

another fifty.

6 — In Valona forty thousand people demonstrate against the repression.

7 — In TepelenĂ«, the Forum for Democracy call a demonstration which

sixty people turn up for. In Tirana, Berisha’s party mobilises,

organising a meeting to call for democracy and non-violence.

8 — In Tirana, the authorities outlaw a demonstration organised by the

socialists. Clashes at Fier. Some of the guards on the Greek border sell

their arms and emigrate.

9 — During the night, police in Valona arrest a number of people

considered responsible for the incidents that have taken place over the

past few days. A considerable number of demonstrators gather to protest

in front of the police station. The police shoot: one dead and over

twenty wounded.

10 — In Valona forty thousand people on a march set fire to the

headquarters of the Democratic Party, devastating it: over eighty people

are wounded in the clashes that follow; one of them does not survive.

The police organise a cordon around the city to prevent access to the

rebels coming from the neighbouring villages in solidarity with those of

Valona. Meanwhile, in the vicinity of the police station, police are

overcome, disarmed and their uniforms burned.

— In Tirana, police fail to prevent the rebels from assembling. The

tension rises as the demonstrators shout, “Valona, Valona”. A huge

demonstration takes place in Gjirokastër.

Parliament declares itself against the state of emergency.

11 — In Valona over thirty thousand people take part in the funeral of a

demonstrator killed by police a few days before. The government attempts

to proclaim a state of emergency in the city, but the decree submitted

to parliament meets with opposition from the deputies of the Democratic

Party, worried about the possible consequences of such a measure. As a

result the government decide to fire the head of the police in the town.

12 — The demonstrations continue, extending to nearly all the towns in

the south and to some cities in the north. A policeman is killed outside

his home in Valona. A few days later a demonstrator is killed in Fier.

19 — In Tirana, a new demonstration takes place in spite of the police

ban.

20 — In Valona University about forty students begin a hunger strike,

calling for severe judicial measures against those responsible for the

police brutality; the resignation of the head of national television and

Meksi; the formation of a government of technicians until new elections

take place; and an end to all hostilities.

25 — Berisha sends the home minister to Germany to ask for a loan to pay

for new police equipment, while the governments of other countries

express their support.

28 — Police attempt to evict the University of Valona, where the hunger

strike is still going on. A group of secret agents prepares to enter the

building, but there is an immediate reaction. In spite of requests for

non-violence made by the students on hunger strike, about two thousand

rebels armed with guns and knives set off from the university for the

headquarters of the secret services (SHIK). Here there are clashes with

agents who barricade themselves inside the building; the demonstrators

insist on going on the assault and manage to set fire to the SHIK

headquarters by using grenades. Three agents die in the burning

building, while others who try to escape are lynched: the balance is six

dead among the police and three dead and various wounded among the

demonstrators. The rebels then move towards an army barracks, break down

the door and plunder all the weapons they can without the least

resistance from the soldiers. A heavy machine gun is installed in

defence of the university. The clashes go on till the next day.

March

1 — The city of Valona is in the hands of the insurgents. The funerals

of the three civilians killed the previous night take place without

incident, but new clashes begin towards the evening, leaving five

wounded. Other arms and munitions depots are sacked, while five army

barracks are stormed. The armed insurgents move towards nearby towns to

extend the revolt. In Valona, Sarandë and Delvinë, the situation is

declared to be out of control. Meanwhile Italian foreign minister Dini

declares that the revolt is led by “bands of delinquents incited by left

wing extremists”.

— In LushnjĂ« some police riot-control vehicles en route to Valona are

blocked by the population. About forty agents are disarmed, stripped and

their vehicles set alight.

— In Tirana, parliament is convoked for an extraordinary sitting. The

same evening the government announces the resignation of prime minister

Meksi, but the decisions have no effect on the rebels. Fierce clashes

between demonstrators and police: the police get the worst of it and a

police station is set on fire.

2 — The government declares a state of emergency. The public residence

of Berisha, in the hills of Valona, is sacked and torched. Near the port

of the city, ten thousand insurgents surround the garrison of the

strategic base of Pacha Liman, soldiers abandon their positions and the

commander alone remains to open the door to the insurgents. He was to

become the organiser of the defence of the town in the case of an

intervention of Berisha’s troops. In SarandĂ«, about thirty thousand

demonstrators come out into the streets without being impeded by the

terrified police, who disappear. The police headquarters are looted and

set on fire, the cars and offices of the SHIK meet the same fate. Four

hundred kalashnikovs fall into the hands of the insurgents who carry on

attacking the courts, the attorney’s office, and the prison, where they

set free about a hundred prisoners. They then set off to storm a bank.

— At HimarĂ«, the town hall and police headquarters are set on fire.

— In DelvinĂ«, the prefecture and the Attorney’s office are attacked and

a bank raided.

— In Levan the armoury of an army barracks is looted.

— In GjirokastĂ«r, already on permanent general strike for a number of

days, the rebels invade the police station, take the arms, free about

fifteen prisoners jailed there, then set fire to the building. From

Valona to Sarandë and in Tepelenë barricades are erected in the streets.

Violent clashes take place in Tirana during a demonstration of six

thousand people. A number of journalists are among the wounded. The

rebels overturn and set fire to police vehicles. A state of emergency is

declared over the whole of Albania for an indeterminate period. Hundreds

of potential agitators are thrown in jail.

3 — In spite of everything, parliament decides to confirm Berisha’s

presidential mandate for another five years, and to re-establish order

by force without any fuss. The head offices of the most important

opposition newspaper is set on fire by SHIK agents, and about twenty

people are evacuated. The censor allows the publication of only one

daily newspaper, obviously a pro-government one. All other means of

communication are outlawed. Berisha orders military encirclement of the

area from Valona to Sarandë and dismisses the Chief of Staff, accused of

not having shown sufficient zeal in repressing the popular revolt, and

puts a SHIK military adviser in his place. From that moment on, all

armoured cars sent into the south of the country are commanded by SHIK

agents, not by regular soldiers. Berisha orders the insurgents to hand

over their arms, while the army takes back control of the area extending

to Fier, about a hundred kilometres from the south of the capital.

— Meanwhile, in GjirokastĂ«r, a commercial centre belonging to a finance

company is torched.

— First Italian blitz. In Valona, the last of the “important” foreigners

and journalists are evacuated in Italian army helicopters. The only

law-keeping forces to remain in the town are plain clothes SHIK agents.

Four civilians intending to turn in their arms are killed by the rebels.

4 — In spite of considerable international pressure, Berisha refuses to

allow the opposition to even enter the government.

— In Valona, the looting of arms depots continues. The insurgents

prepare to take on the army: snipers take up positions on house

rooftops, barricades are raised at the entrance to the city, lookouts

are placed on surrounding hills to survey access to the town, and a

bridge is mined.

— In Styari, clashes between demonstrators and the military end after

about forty minutes as the army retreats.

— In SarandĂ«, the insurgents, including women and children, turn up en

masse at police stations and the naval base looking for more arms. They

find piles of firearms, bags of ammunition, a battery of artillery,

cannons, heavy machine guns and six warships, while journalists are

forced to destroy their video film footage. Some of the army units

attack the port, but are pushed back. All roads to the north are blocked

in anticipation of the arrival of tanks. A SHIK car is stopped at a

roadblock: one agent is burned alive, two manage to escape and a fourth

is taken hostage. On the road leading to Sarandë, fifty soldiers with

three armoured cars desert the army and unite with the rebels.

— In DelvinĂ«, some army units shoot at the insurgents from Mig 15s,

causing dozens of deaths. Two pilots who refuse to shoot into the crowd

escape and land at Galatina, asking Italy for political asylum.

— Anticipating the army’s inability to repress the insurrection

militarily, all the forces of recuperation come out into the field. In

Sarandë, an Autonomous Communal council is formed, directed by leaders

of the opposition parties. A Defence Council directed by a retired

colonel. These organisms lay down the conditions for the surrender of

arms by the rebels: early elections, Berisha’s resignation and the

formation of a government of technocrats to ensure the transition. One

of the prime measures taken by these Councils is the organisation of

“self-defence against the looters” and “protection of goods” squads.

These politicians, directly in contact with Berisha, insist that the

army refrain from intervening, aware that if that were to happen they

would no longer be able to control the situation. In the name of the

struggle for democracy, the head of the town Defence Council orders that

the insurgents no longer wear masks; moreover the Albanian national

anthem is played in the streets throughout the country every morning.

5 — The movement extends to Memaliaj and TepelenĂ«, where the insurgents

set fire to police stations and loot shops, erecting barricades with the

wreckage of the burnt-out lorries. Mortars, cannons, anti-aircraft guns

and land-to-air missiles pass into the hands of the rebels, who place

them on high grounds in the town.

— In Gramsh insurgents mine a small bridge after taking it from the

soldiers, in order to block the advance of the tanks. Army officers

desert en masse and unite with the rebels of Valona and Sarandë, others

flee to Greece.

— In the north, an area less touched by the movement, the government

hands out five thousand guns to the members of the Democratic Party to

confront the insurgents. In Tirana, Berisha meets the representatives of

the opposition parties and proposes a truce and an amnesty for anyone

who lays down arms. They do not get very good results. Meanwhile, the

insurgents reinforce their defence positions, erecting barricades and

preparing check points to slow the advance of the armed forces.

— One hundred and ten Italian firms which operate and prosper in Albania

launch an appeal for peace.

6 — The insurrection spreads all over the country. In Valona, a Public

Health Committee is created (PHC) consisting of all the opposition

parties, and a Defence Committee is formed by ex-army officials. To

combat the passivity of the army, Berisha announces the arrest of four

officers accused of not defending their barracks from looting.

7 — In TepelenĂ«, the head of Berisha’s bodyguards, who had been sent

there to calm spirits, is kidnapped. Here too a Public Health Committee

is formed.

— The insurgents continue to refuse to hand over arms, and looting of

weapons depots continues.

— The European Union invites Berisha to put off armed intervention as

long as possible and make an urgent call for early elections.

8 — Second Italian blitz in Valona.

— In GjirokastĂ«r, on the arrival of the Albanian army headed for PĂ«rmet,

the population rebels and captures the commander of the column without

any resistance from the soldiers. Arms are requisitioned from the

soldiers and distributed among the people.

— Sixty-five SHIK agents pour out of six military helicopters. A group

of insurgents manages to block three of the helicopters while the others

take off with only the pilot on board. The troops that have disembarked

run for cover in the mountains, chased by the rebels. Meanwhile, the

airport is occupied and the customs offices are attacked, looted and

burned. The local radio station is also occupied. A Public Health

Committee is formed to try to placate the rioters.

9 — Dini flies to Tirana, and Berisha proposes early elections. The

Greek border is abandoned after an attack by the rebels. Armouries in

the Berate area are also sacked. Shots are exchanged at Shkodër, Fier

and PĂ«rmet. In this last city, five deaths and many wounded are reported

among the insurgents; a whole brigade of soldiers deserts and lines up

with them. After pushing back the army, the rebels attack and destroy

the police headquarters, courts, town hall, two banks and various shops.

The insurrectional movement spreads to another sixteen villages in the

PĂ«rmet region, where the nth Public Health Committee is constituted to

put a brake on the revolt.

The extension of the movement, above all the fall of Gjirokastër (a

military base indispensable for any government intervention), convince

Berisha of the need to come to an agreement with the Socialist Party,

the main political opposition force. The agreement foresees the

establishment of a government of national reconciliation, new elections

before June, and an extension of the promise of amnesty to all who have

participated in the insurrectional movement.

— The Public Health Committees and the Defence Committees approve the

agreement, and the Socialist Party promises to wind up all the

committees in three days. In Sarandë and Valona, the insurgents express

their disagreement with the politics of the PHC. In the first town, the

PHC is ignored as the rebels start making decisions on their own again.

In the second, the daily demonstration takes place without flags or

opposition leaders and ends up in looting and arson.

— Meanwhile, the revolt spreads in the north, and a huge arms depot is

plundered in Shkoder.

— In Peshkopi, Lezhe-Kuksi and Lacy, the army retreats in the face of

riots and looting.

10 — The PHC in Valona launch an appeal “to all honest policemen”, to

come forward to help them “re-establish calm and peace”.

Third Italian blitz. The revolt continues to spread in the north, to

Skrapari, Malakastra, Kelcyra, Berat, Polican, Gramsh and Kuzini. State

food reserves and the armouries of three army barracks are attacked.

Garrisons and police forces abandon towns without shooting as the

insurgents help themselves to weapons. Another PHC is created. In

Gramsh, where there is a large arms factory, insurgents take over three

barracks and set fire to the police headquarters, then they go up

towards Fier and take control of the roads. The army arsenals in

Skrapari are sacked; the military airport of Kuçove is attacked, where

the rebels take possession of 40 Migs; control is gained of Polican,

which houses an arms and munitions factory. The outcome of the clashes

is fourteen wounded. No longer being able to count on the army, Berisha

arms his partisans: in Bajram-Curi and Kukes his men sack important arms

depots.

11 — The PHC of eight towns in the south meet in GjirokastĂ«r and create

a people’s national health front, whose requests are: the resignation of

Berisha, the restructuring of the secret police, the reimbursement of

lost savings, and the organisation of new elections. In a declaration

signed along with the Italian ambassador, the Valona PHC pledge “to

favour the immediate restitution of the arms in the possession of the

inhabitants” and “to assure public order and the progressive return to

administrative normality” in the city.

— Evacuation orders are issued for all the Italians who are still in

Albania. Bashkim Fino, socialist, is nominated prime minister: his first

decision is to reinforce the police and attempt to quash the uprising in

Durazzo, where three rebels have been killed.

— Looting continues all over the country. The towns in the hands of the

rebels are: Polican, Kelcyra, Përmet, Kuçovë, Skrapari, Berat,

Gjirokastër, Sarandë, Belvinë, Himarë, Tepelenë, Memaliaja, Valona,

Kruma, Burrel and Lacy.

12 — In spite of attempts at national reconciliation made by the

Government to restore calm, the revolt reaches the gates of Tirana. An

arms and explosives factory in Mjeksi is plundered. In Elbasan, the last

halt before the capital, the army and police retreat while the

insurgents take over the arms. Fier, CĂ«rrick and Gramsh are also

abandoned by government forces as rebels set fire to the police station

and plunder three army barracks. The revolt spreads to Shkodër, the

biggest town in the north: stormed barracks are abandoned by soldiers,

the prison gates are swung open, a bank is blown up, the courts

devastated and shops looted. The important air base of Gjadër also falls

into the hands of the insurgents.

The risk of the revolt extending beyond the borders is beginning to

worry the surrounding States, who are taking precautions by closing

access to their territory. Berisha prepares his defence: he has numerous

mercenaries arrive from the north of Albania and nearby Kosovo. His men

sack the arsenals in the cities in the north. In Tirana, SHIK agents

break into the military academy and three arms depots in the outskirts,

emptying them. They do the same with seven anti-aircraft defence depots

and distribute the arms to their men and to members of the Democratic

Party.

13 — In Tirana, the secret police are now circulating alone. They parade

around the main buildings with armoured vehicles and impressive cars,

shooting machine-gunfire and shouting at the top of their voices to show

who is in command. Armoured vehicles are placed at the nerve centres of

the town: the presidential palace, parliament and the administrative

offices. Most of the ministries, public buildings, banks and shops are

closed. The streets are deserted, while the noise of gunshot is

incessant. Six people, including two children, are killed. Guards

abandon the prisons leaving about six hundred prisoners to escape. Mass

looting increases in the food and arms depots in spite of the presence

of the SHIK. The training centre is also attacked. Nothing remains of

the barracks but the gutted shell. The sentinel of the National Guard

headquarters does not raise a finger. The people take over everything.

The prefect of Tirana makes an appeal on television in the name of all

the political parties, calling for calm. But towards the end of the

afternoon the whole city is in a state of panic. Faithful civil servants

cram as many files and dossiers as they can into government cars;

soldiers and police desert and go home. Then even the members of the

SHIK disappear from the scene. The embassies spread the order for a

general evacuation, while a company of marines is lined up in front of

the American embassy. An air-lift is set up between the units of Italian

marines patrolling the waters between the Gulf of Taranto and the Gulf

of Durazzo. Vehicles are made available to evacuate the foreigners

(French, German, Greek, American and Italian).

— In the evening, the historic city of Korçë is stormed. In LezhĂ«, the

rebels attack the SHIK offices and blow up the safe of the State Bank,

while the town notables create the ‘Safeguarding Committee of Lezhë’; to

try to placate the movement they go through the streets in cars with

loudhailers calling for calm.

— Berisha sends his family to safety in Italy.

— From south to north the insurrectional movement spreads, making the

State vacillate; but if the institutional forces are retreating from

Tirana, it is in order for them to re-organise better at national and

international level. The insurgents for their part do not get much

support from revolutionaries in other countries, left alone to carry on

their struggle.

14 — In Tirana the Red Cross headquarters is sacked as clashes in front

of the President of the Republic’s palace continue. Durazzo port, now in

the hands of the rebels, is sacked.

Meanwhile, the European Union assures Albania of their humanitarian

support: the intervention of a military force of fifty thousand men

well-equipped for the hotbed, and the offer of food in exchange for

stolen arms for the more co-operative of the rebels.

15 — Berisha launches an appeal for voluntary workers to re-establish

order in the capital to enrol in the army or the police with wages of

400 dollars (four times the average wage). Moreover he promises to

triple the wages of the police who return to their posts. Obviously, the

proposal attracts a considerable number of people. In Tirana, the police

regain control of the airport.

16 — While the Albanian State is receiving offers of help from Italy and

Greece—who are ready to send technical experts capable of providing

courses or restructuring the police forces and the army—a march for

peace takes place in the centre of Tirana. In Gjadër, soldiers abandon

the air base.

17 — European Union experts arrive in Tirana for two days’ talks with

the Albanian government, aimed at evaluating the eventuality of a

‘humanitarian mission’.

18 — In GjirokastĂ«r, a bank is attacked and the safe removed.

20 — In Tirana, clashes take place in front of the presidential palace.

An Italian marines special unit disembarks on the beach near Durazzo.

The Italian government announces the expulsion of any illegal immigrants

who turn out to have escaped from Albanian prisons. The Albanian

minister protests: “We have no functioning prisons”.

21 — Berisha asks for military aid from Turkey.

22 — Meeting between the new minister Fino and the PHC of Valona.

Armoured vehicles take control of the city of Fier.

25 — Forty tons of French aid in food and medicines arrive at Tirana

airport.

26 — The negotiations of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation

in Europe (OSCE) end with the creation of a “Humanitarian mission by a

multinational force with a UN mandate”. About six thousand soldiers are

sent to Albania to garrison the ports of Durazzo and Valona, Tirana

airport, and the main communication links between the north and south of

the country.

27 — One of the many armed gangs in the pay of the wealthy proprietors

who mingle with insurgents in order to protect their bosses’

interests—and actually reach the point of killing some of them—get a

harsh welcome from the armed inhabitants of one village.

28 — An Italian sloop rams a patrol vessel full of Albanian illegal

immigrants. It sinks, causing many to be drowned.

— In Valona a congress of the PHCs of the whole of Albania takes place.

Representatives of eighteen towns in the south and six in the north are

present. Members of the opposition parties also attend.

29 — The decision for an international “peace mission” is delivered as

an ultimatum to the military command in Italy

April

9 — About a hundred SHIK agents disembark in Brindisi to control the

movements of Albanian refugees in Italy.

12 -The Jaubert commando arrives at Durazzo from France to preside over

the landing of the French troops.

14 — An airlift is organised between Pisa and Tirana to transport

material and equipment.

15 — Operation “Alba” is set in motion. Six thousand soldiers belonging

to the multinational forces disembark in Durazzo and Valona. One ship

carries three hundred and sixty tons of flour and thirty six tons of

legume: the whip and the carrot.

— Meantime in Tirana, the situation is returning to normal. The only

weapons to be seen are those in the hands of the police.

17 — An OSCE delegation meets the representatives of the PHC in Valona,

whose president expresses concern about the show of force by foreign

troops.

May

1–7 — Police reappear in the streets of ShkodĂ«r, BĂ«rat, BurrĂ«l, KukĂ«s

and Krujë, but the courts are not functioning: no trace remains of the

buildings that once housed the police stations, courts, prisons. All

over the country the police are having difficulty in recapturing escaped

prisoners, their identity unknown due to all the relative documents

having been destroyed during the revolt.

14 — The opposition parties threaten to boycott the elections fixed for

the end of June for fear of possible intrigues. All discussion is now

centred on the importance of moving towards elections to set right the

results of the corrupt politics of Berisha during all these years.

21 — An agreement between all ten parties results in the nomination of a

new leader of the secret police, one of the demands of the Public Health

Committee.

June

4 — President Sali Berisha escapes a dynamite attack during an election

meeting with the Democratic Party. Apart from a few exceptions, no one

hands over the arms plundered during the revolt. The state of emergency

and curfew are still in force.

27 — A convoy of international observers, escorted by Italian and

Rumanian soldiers, leaves Tirana for Gjirokastër in the south, passing

by Mëmaliaj, Tepelenë and other localities. The passage of the vehicles

is greeted with hissing and insults, but no incidents occur.

29 — Elections. The spectre of the revolution moves away from the

country thanks to the return of politics.

July

23 — Berisha finally resigns from presidency of the Republic which he

had ruled for five years. In this way the spectacle of national

reconciliation concludes itself.

August

12 — The multinational forces leave the country.

Albania, laboratory of subversion

The insurrection against power is the only time the word “people” is not

a mystification, because it indicates the power of united individuals.

Charles Meslet

The atmosphere in Gjirokaster is mad. The popular revolt has transformed

itself into total anarchy, there is no police, no State, no rules. The

city has become enthusiastic, has brightened up, got involved in the

game of rebellion.

Le Monde 11/3/97.

Albania has become a vast laboratory. On the one hand, like the rest of

the countries of the old Eastern bloc in their passage from bureaucratic

capitalism to the liberal version, it is experiencing the resistance of

the world economy and the democratic management of power. On the other,

one sees immense insurrectional possibilities opening up that are

capable of upsetting the projects of the State and capitalist power. The

importance of beginning to reflect on a potentially explosive situation

will therefore not escape revolutionaries. To know and make known the

nature and extent of the armed insurrection in Albania as quickly as

possible, and begin informal discussions to evaluate the real

possibility of a theoretical or practical revolutionary

intervention—that is what we are proposing to libertarians and all

individuals who continue to see rebellion against the State and Capital

as the only road that can lead to real freedom.

Some people have been saying for a long time now that the countries of

ex-“real” socialism are ready to explode and strike at the very heart of

the world order. The Albanian example is no exception. And what is

happening just now on our own doorstep is perhaps making this analysis

more concrete.

Unfortunately very few attempts have been made to examine the many

problems raised by insurrection: its organisational forms, subversive

content, language, communication, sabotage of the power apparatus,

plunder, the abolition of money, the destruction of capitalist

production and the refusal of any management, even that which claims to

be revolutionary, the free appropriation of goods, etc. Locked up in our

fine proclamations and empty formulae, we risk being taken unawares by

unforeseen social situations.

We believe the time has come for us to talk about insurrection and

revolution and cease to be embalmers of ideologies or Cassandra of the

eternal defeats of the exploited. We do not deny that news of destroyed

barracks, besieged prisons and burned out banks fills our hearts with

joy and inflames our dreams. But to really dream, and in the most

dangerous manner, means to dream with our eyes open, ready to jump into

the heart of the situation without strategic illusions that are as

presumptuous as they are ridiculous, and try to join the game with all

arms at our disposal.

What follows are no more than a few notes related to a discussion to

which each can contribute their own ideas and critique. It is no less

important for us to have them circulate without delay. A better

knowledge of events will allow us to analyse what is happening in the

Balkans in greater depth, in order to better address our possibilities

for action.

From one capitalism to the other

After enjoying the delights of bureaucratic capitalism for such a long

time, the exploited of the former so-called communist countries have

recently been savouring the many opportunities offered by the liberal

version. The Albanian finance company affair, as it has come to be

known, is but one example. Without their miserable conditions being in

any way changed, the oppressed of Albania found themselves presented

with private investment, once considered the worst of evils, as a

guarantee of individual freedom and promise of happiness. The new

republic is allowing everything that the old one controlled directly.

The market has officially become good, just as it was once officially

non-existent. Converted to the new religion, the population rushed to

put their money into banks that promised them a rapid doubling of

stakes. Unrestrained capitalism allows what “normal” capitalism claims

to prevent: telling bigger and bigger fibs. So, just as is happening in

China, people are finding themselves with the worst of both worlds—the

secret police and brutal speculation.

The finance companies went bankrupt, and the press admitted that they

had pandered to the party in power in exchange for State patronage. The

fact is that nobody wants to make any long term investment in a country

that does not have stable political authority. Economic cannibalism

consequently becomes the way capitalism functions. The mechanism of the

racket was more or less as follows: find particular “clients”, that is

to say, people who are so desperate that they are willing to believe the

lies of advertising unquestioningly; extract as much money as possible

from them, enlist the politicians, declare bankruptcy ... and the deed

is done! All this, which the servile press euphemistically refer to as

“informal finance”, is permitted and encouraged by the bureaucracy as a

means of defending their own privileges.

Parliamentary democracy is the form most suited to capitalism, because

the sovereign citizen is the best consumer. That helps us understand the

collapse of bureaucratic collectivism. But here Capital is not yet as

fully established as it was in the days of the determinist fairy tales.

The population is regaining a desire for freedom that had been

suffocated in decades of terrible dictatorship. Moreover, the old

Stalinist elite are not prepared to give up their power as they undergo

a political and economic transformation that is threatening to eliminate

them. The situation is therefore creating social conflict, the outcome

of which is not easy to predict. Added to this, capitalism is moving

from the competitive market—and the American dream of infinite growth—to

the new world market. Having lived too long on the putative cold war

economy (playing the role of international gendarme, with a military

budget continually on the increase, and direct control through the

State), the United States are not prepared to launch expensive and at

times spectacularly unconvincing expeditions in defence of freedom just

anywhere.

Finally, it remains to be seen whether a modern democracy would work in

countries like Russia or China—and whether any of the other States which

made up the former Eastern bloc, Poland, for example, will ever succeed

in having an autonomous political situation.

The mask of democracy

The revolt in Albania has laid bare the unscrupulousness of democracy: a

president re-elected under martial law, censorship of the press and the

interruption of radio transmissions, the police openly commanded by the

central committee of a political party, to give but the most blatant

examples. Arms in hand, the insurgents have forced the State to reveal

its true essence. Of course, the rebels are nothing but “red terrorists

supported and financed by foreign secret services” (according to the

first declarations of Sali Berisha), and the revolt “an attack on

economic life and individual freedom”. Now it is obvious that what is

making a constant attack on life is the economy itself. And as far as

individual freedom is concerned, this has never revealed itself with

such clarity as in the burning of the courts, police stations,

supermarkets, banks, town halls, prefectures and border check posts; in

the attacks on the army barracks, the plundering of arms depots and, in

a superb gesture of collective joy, the freeing of all prisoners. This

is what was seen in Sarande, Himaren, Vlore, Delvine, Levan, Gjirokaster

and other towns in southern Albania. The unscrupulousness continues as

other States, particularly Italy and Greece, are asking for dialogue to

be initiated with the opposition (a clumsy term for indicating an armed

attack). The opposition are organising new elections (the May 96 ones

being too obviously fixed), designed to lead to the formation of a new

government of “national unity, reconciliation or technocrats, it matters

little”, as the Greek minister for European affairs declared. Moreover,

as a French diplomat pointed out, if on the one hand the head of State

is a dictator, on the other it is not known who is who or what they

want. “Who represents who?” is asked fearfully. Is repression the only

way for Sali Berisha to stay in power? As far as the press are

concerned, they are playing around with various bungled hypotheses:

“Somali-style bloody anarchy”, “wild repression”, the “awakening of the

spirit of revenge” of the other Albanian communities “who tried to get

involved”, and an almost “laudatory justification” of the insurrection

(“down there it’s not like here, down there it is necessary to take up

arms to get free elections!”). As no political change could improve the

miserable conditions of the poor, a civil war might, as in the former

Yugoslavia, prolong their submission and guarantee a lucrative business

for the arms dealers. But no nationalistic demands seem to be appearing

on the horizon. And the rebels are still armed.

The intelligence of the revolt

Only those unaware of the incredible banality of the reasons for

rebellions throughout history will be surprised that insurrection has

broken out in response to a fraudulent financial operation supported by

an idiotic government. The disparity between the actions carried out by

the exploited and the causes that claim to justify them, no longer

surprises us. Revolutionaries who insist on clear programmes and

well-defined social concepts such as a just cause for which to fight,

show themselves to be just as naive as the journalists they claim to

criticise.

Why then should a movement which has gone far beyond democratic

legality—in the streets, not in theory—be asking for this legality to be

restored? The demands of those claiming to be the insurgents’ spokesmen

are: nomination of a technical government, new parliamentary elections,

resignation of the director of State television and radio, the dropping

of all court proceedings against the soldiers who joined the rebels,

amnesty for all the insurgents, and a reversal of the state of

emergency.

For their part, the people are calling for the demission of Sali Berisha

and an impossible re-reimbursement of the sums invested. The reasons are

to be found in social contradictions which lead to people calling for

the imprisonment of corrupt politicians or “criminals” then on the day

of the insurrection freeing all prisoners without distinction; to

entrusting their money and their hopes to the banks then setting them on

fire. When people take their destiny into their own hands they become

more intelligent.

Then anything can happen. It is in this veering of consciousness that

the necessity of insurrection resides. It is the force of the rupture

that leads the exploited to talk to each other and organise directly,

making it possible to find answers at the very moment in which new

questions are being posed. It is a pure formality to talk of

self-management or self-organisation without the presence of the

subversive rupture. Worse still, that merely strengthens established

order. The normality of work, consumerism, the family and TV utilises

everything, even direct democracy, ecology or “alternative” culture. It

devours all criticism.

We are not saying that a movement’s content is of no importance. On the

contrary, we maintain that this content can only radicalise if it has

the time and space to do so, the space of generalised revolt, and time

snatched from hierarchy, coercion and boredom.

Where did it spring from?

What is happening in Albania is showing anyone who has eyes to see what

many seemed to have been forgotten. Against the apologists of

capitalism, the cantors of “complex societies”, the zealots of

omnipotence resulting from technological control, and the ideologists of

progress upset by the barbarians’ lack of grace, these Albanian

barbarians are demonstrating that it is possible to stand against a

State, arms in hand. The desertions and mutinies of the soldiers

demonstrate that even the most brutally repressive machinery still

requires men to make it function. The choice of symbols and persons

under attack tells us that, no matter how thick the layers of ideology,

oppression is still tangible.

It is difficult to see how the situation will evolve. There seems to be

a resurgence of the Stalinist political racket claiming to represent the

opposition in response to a need to unify the struggle (during the early

days of the struggle plundered weapons were placed at the entrance to

the university where students were on hunger strike calling for

scholastic reforms; the students then attacked the police station on the

campus). The press are talking of popular assemblies and “insurgents’

councils” that have taken the place of the town councils. How all that

is working, in other words how life is changing, we do not know. These

councils could be an attempt at autonomous organisation by the

exploited, or they might simply be a democratic disguise for Leninist

ideology. Up until now, the most important element has been the refusal

to hand over arms in spite of the new leadership’s attempts to have the

guarantees offered by the government accepted. This refusal, as well as

making effective the freedom that laws (exactly like the finance

company) only promise, could give the insurgents the time to go beyond

promises—absolutely useless in the face of conditions of exploitation

that no capitalism with a human face could ever improve. What makes the

difference is obviously the social aspect (how the State is not just

perceived to be the enemy, but is also rendered ineffective; how

relations between individuals escape the economy), not the military one.

The generalised armed rebellion, the massive participation of women and

children, the dialogue in the streets and the free decision to rebel

that has been recognised by each and every citizen are all very

significant. None of the parties is in control of the situation, and the

people are well armed.

So, what will happen? We are not prophets. We could say, in order to

justify our inertness, that everything will simply end up with a change

in the ruling class. But we do not have a waiting game to justify.

It should be noted that the geographical area of the clash is a

particularly explosive one. In Bulgaria only a short time has passed

since contestation ended up in an assault on parliament (there too

demanding new elections).

There are many Greeks in Albania (concentrated in the area controlled by

the insurgents) and illegal Albanian immigrants in Greece (continually

threatened with expulsion and so submitted to ferocious exploitation).

The same could be said for Kosovo and Macedonia, not to mention the

historical tensions between Greece, Bulgaria and Turkey. If the Albanian

insurgents were to pose just one social question that was to extend

beyond the borders! In a word, the area is a powder keg that will

maintain its explosive potential no matter what the outcome of the

revolt is. It is no coincidence that the governments of Italy and Greece

are on red alert: an increase in Albanian immigration could make the

internal situation in these countries problematic (the Italian army has

been protecting its southern coasts for some time now against

undesirable visitors from Albania). So all the bosses would prefer to

avoid a bloodbath. But if the movement were to become a revolutionary

threat, that would be their last card.

When looking on is not enough

As we said earlier, the Albanian situation could be the catalyst for

profound reflection on an anti-authoritarian anti-capitalist revolution.

It is already demonstrating the theoretical value of the barricades. It

could lead us to get rid of old ideological junk and look at questions

that need to be faced (for example, the disappearance of the great

productive units where capital once concentrated the exploited; the

explosion of social rebellion; the end of the old class confrontations

and relative forms of organisation, unions and workers’ councils; the

problem of the unions, the destruction of technology, etc.).

Perhaps there is more to be done. Certainly we do not agree with the

political stance of supplying aid, nor do we have pedagogical illusions

such as supplying recipes for anarchy in the Balkans. On the contrary,

common elements for a possible revolt are needed, to be expressed in

direct attack, pillage and violence against the established order. We

need to determine what of the Albanian situation concerns us directly,

and how we can widen its range in both the social and geographic sense.

The problem of knowing how to involve ourselves and radicalise the

content of a movement in process is a theoretical problem, that is true.

But above all it is a practical one. The question is international, and

there is certainly no lack of targets.

Reality is in ferment and the only realism we obstinately continue to

extol is that of not wasting time.

A few anarchists

Paris, 11 March 1997

A look at Italian investments in Albania

About 600 Italian firms have opened up branches in Albania over the past

six years, 400 of which are based in Puglia. The turnover is not

disclosed, but is estimated to be hundreds of billions of lire.

Investment sectors for Italian capitalism are multiple: packaging,

textiles and clothing, woodcarving, footwear, building, quarrying,

hotels, the food and services industry, a network for the sale of

petroleum products, chains of shops, especially for food and detergents,

import-export companies, bottling of Coca Cola and mineral water, the

biggest private bank (Banco Italo-Shiptare, with the participation of

the Banco di Roma), the reconstruction of the aqueduct of Tirana and

Durazzo, the reconstruction of some of the electric and telephone lines,

etc...

Why is there so much interest in investing in Albania? One bosses’

answer says it all, that of Adelchi Sergio, shoe manufacturer in Tricase

(Lecce) with sales proceeds of 250 billion lire. He has 1,500 employees

in Puglia and 5,000 spread throughout Albania, Bulgaria, Rumania and

India: “One worker in Italy costs me 28 million lire a year, in Albania,

140,000 lire a month, in Rumania 100,000, in India 50,000. I am willing

to shut down everything abroad right away. But in Italy, especially in

the south, things need to change. I am thinking of tax savings, and

labour costs cut by 30–35 per cent. Yes, the world is changing, and it

is absurd that you can divorce your wife when you want to, but are

obliged to keep a worker all your life”. (Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno,

February 11, 1997).

It is interesting to see how Italian investors in Albania have seen the

popular revolt in that country. First with optimism, then, as the risks

increased, they are afraid of losing the capital invested.

The Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno, a Pugliese daily which had invested in

Albania by founding the second most widely distributed daily, Gazeta

Shqiptare, reported on February 1, 1997 “the voices of those who in a

country on the verge of a state of siege are showing their great

optimism”.

Luigi Fabri, of Ancona, president of the Italian committee of building

contractors in Albania, has been in the building industry for five

years. “I have 240 employees who earn an average of 280,000 lire a

month. What is happening? It is a positive change because at last it

relates to the reality of the Albanian market which has been kept going

on illusions for years. It was devastating for the country, both at the

financial and the ethical level, to to believe it was possible to live

without working. The huge sum of money that has been locked up all this

time in the safes of the finance companies all this time will finally

reach the market in the form of investment and consumerism. I believe

that this is one more reason for investing in Albania today. Why did I

come here? In reality I was working in the public works sector:

transferring abroad was the only way to get out of the crisis.”

World economic interests in Albania...a few notes that cannot fail to be

of interest to all those who wish to demonstrate their solidarity with

the insurgents.

First the banks: Banca di Roma, Arab Islamic Bank, Bank of Bahrain,

Dardania Bank, Bank of Piraeus, International Commercial Bank

(Malaysia).

The following programmes were instrumental in shifting foreign aid away

from “humanitarian assistance” towards development schemes based on

market-orientation and the transition to privatisation: World Bank

(Forestry Projects and much more); Bank for Reconstruction and

Development; IMF; EU PHARE Programme (pesticides, herbicide imports,

etc., always with the help of the Peace Corps); European Investment

Bank; USAID (has moved 92% of the land in Albania into private hands

through property registration, leasing of public lands for sustainable

forestry and grazing, etc.); The American ORT Federation; World Trade

Organisation.

The major government investors in Albania are, the USA, Italy, Germany,

Switzerland, Greece.

The biggest corporations involved are: Coca-Cola, British Petroleum,

Premier Oil, The Rogner Group, F. Lanto.

Other corporations and Foundations: ENI, EniChem America Inc., 2000 West

Loop South, Suite 2010, Houston TX; 666 Fifth Avenue, New York 10103;

Agip Petroleum, Suite 300, Brokhollow Central, 2950 N. Loop, West

Houston TX 77092; Saipem Inc., 15950 Park Row, Houston TX 77024;

Copelouzos Group; Prometheus Gas S.A.; Rao Gazprom.

[from Operai contro April 1997]