Article
Albania's anti-corruption prosecutors, through SPAK, froze the bank accounts of Albania Land Development as protests over a Kushner-linked Flamingo coastal project entered a seventh day, alleging irregular land titles, changes to protected-area status, and possible public-tender circumvention. The probe targets acquisitions in the Vjosa-Narta zone, where ownership has been disputed since the 1990s, and follows prior concerns that 2024 legal reclassifications and a strategic-investor designation were tailored to enable a massive development package tied to Atlantic Incubation Partners and related entities. Prime Minister Edi Rama has defended the investment model as legitimate, claimed procedural compliance was not finalised, and said the final masterplan remained under redesign, while also warning critics that only the Kushner name gave the issue global visibility. The mainland and island components are seen as a single plan: one site on Sazan Island and a larger mainland footprint near Zvernec, with estimates ranging from a few billion euros to around $4 billion. Opponents, including conservation groups, argue the scope—thousands of rooms plus infrastructure—would damage one of the Mediterranean's remaining wetlands and already-sensitive ecosystems. Heavy machinery activity and beach fencing began before permitting milestones were complete, and security actions against demonstrators triggered stronger domestic backlash, wider demonstrations in Albania and abroad, and a diplomatic fray with Greece over treatment of protesters and minority rights. EU institutions have already tied the dispute to Chapter 27 environmental benchmarks, and the case now tests whether Albania can reverse legal protections and absorb accountability despite strong political and economic pressure
Commenters frame the dispute as part of a broader pattern in which wealthy foreign actors seek rapid influence over public land, drawing parallels with prior controversial projects elsewhere. Several readers compare it to failed or disputed ventures linked to Kushner and argue that the scale of local reaction suggests more than a narrow zoning conflict. Others question whether official actions reflect environmental enforcement or a broader negotiation over price and ownership terms, while many remain deeply skeptical of Albania's support for the developers. Some contributions dismiss official process and frame the issue as systemic elite capture, with claims that the government is being unusually aligned with Trump-linked interests and that such cases are not isolated. The comment tone is highly critical, with frustration directed at perceived impunity, cross-border oligarchic influence, and weak safeguards for public trust.