Demolition of Albanian national theatre sparks angry protests
on
Get link
Facebook
X
Pinterest
Email
Other Apps
Benet Koleka
3-4 minutes
Albanian authorities began demolishing the national
theatre building early on Sunday after dragging away two dozen actors
and activists protecting the site, drawing a large crowd chanting
“shame” and “dictatorship”.
Albanian
activists and supporters clash with police as they protest against the
demolition of the National Theatre in Tirana, Albania May 17, 2020.
REUTERS/Florion Goga
For more than
two years actors, activists and the opposition have contested plans by
Socialist Prime Minister Edi Rama to build a new theatre, saying the
existing building was part of the country’s heritage, and accused him of
corrupt practices.
A large police force showed up before dawn
and removed members of the Alliance to Protect the Theatre, using pepper
spray. Mechanized diggers then began demolishing its front column,
bearing the words “National Theatre”.
The fate of the building,
constructed in 1939 and made into a national theatre in 1945, has
divided society, with many angry that Rama had chosen to act during the
coronavirus lockdown.
“This is no longer about the theatre’s
demolition but the downfall of democracy and freedom. We are in a
dictatorship,” an unidentified member of the alliance said on a Facebook
video.
Rama, whose government says the theatre was decrepit and
in need of modernisation, stuck to his idea he was pushing for progress,
after building a new soccer stadium and market.
“These are the
same people who rise against every project in Tirana. They do not want
development, but they cannot stop Tirana,” Rama said in a Facebook post.
Protesters shoved police blocking access to the site and chanted
“down with the dictatorship”, leading to 37 arrests. One policeman was
hospitalized after being hit by protesters, while a Reuters witness also
saw one protester with head injuries.
One of those arrested,
media analyst Alfred Lela, said after his release that police had used
unjustified violence and verbal abuse. Policemen kicked protesters, who
threw water bottles, according to a Reuters witness.
The police said accusations of violence were untrue.
Critics
of the original plan for a new theatre said the work had been awarded
to one of the government’s preferred partners without being subject to
tender, with the construction of several new high-rise properties
included in the deal.
The Socialist government withdrew that plan in February.
Protesters
have claimed that a six-month period is required by law for a new
project to be approved, and that the government has not secured the
proper permits to carry out the demolition.
Mariya Gabriel, the
European Union’s Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth
Commissioner, last week urged further discussions before any decision
was made on the theatre.
Opposition Democratic Party leader
Lulzim Basha said the demolition was illegal, and had also “demolished
the foundations of society”.
President Ilir Meta, who holds a
largely ceremonial role in government, has complained to the
constitutional court about the demolition, which he has called an
“legal, moral and constitutional crime”. The court is yet to rule.
Comments
Post a Comment