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List: ALBSA-Info[ALBSA-Info] Artist - Mayor Aims to Shake Up Albanian CapitalKreshnik Bejko kbejko at hotmail.comMon Oct 16 09:52:55 EDT 2000
(we've lost "Europe's poorest" title to Moldova according to Reuters) Artist - Mayor Aims to Shake Up Albanian Capital By REUTERS Filed at 10:13 p.m. ET TIRANA (Reuters) - Self-respect, a sense of belonging and a willingness to clean up the mess outside their front doors -- that is what Edi Rama hopes to instill in the people of Tirana as the new mayor of the Albanian capital. The tall, bearded painter, elected mayor this month as candidate for the ruling Socialist Party, has transformed the Ministry of Culture since entering government in May 1998. He now aims to do the same for Tirana, an anarchic Balkan city of some 600,000 people plagued by poverty, official corruption, garbage, uncontrolled urban development and an infrastructure reminiscent of the Third World. ``The problem is to start nourishing a sense of belonging to the city,'' Rama told Reuters. ``People should feel they are living in a town where they have to respect some rules. I think it is possible.'' Albania, Europe's poorest country until it recently lost that dubious honor to Moldova, has been prone to periodic political violence since overthrowing communism in 1991. State institutions have been weak and corruption is endemic. Albanians are fiercely loyal to their family and clan but have little sense of civic pride. VISIBLE SIGNS OF IMPROVEMENT Rama, a charismatic 36-year-old, believes his country, often written off as a hopeless case by the outside world, can change if people are given hope and see visible signs of improvement. As Minister of Culture, he inherited a gloomy institution staffed by aging bureaucrats housed in a ramshackle building. There was not a single computer. Typists cooked meals in their offices. Morale and working standards were low. ``When I entered this building I felt like I was entering a Kafkaesque nightmare,'' Rama says. He first set to work on transforming the building, bringing in gangs of young artists to help him redecorate it. ``I painted a lot of it myself.'' He persuaded Germany's Dresdner Bank to donate computers -- ''At first they thought I was an Albanian Mafioso'' -- removed two-thirds of the staff and put young people in senior posts. ``We are now the only institution in Albania where there are more women than men,'' he says. Rama introduced new letterheads for ministry notepaper and raised standards by fining employees for every typing or spelling error in official documents. ``I am very proud of all this because it has completely changed the spirit,'' he says. ``Since the ministry has been restored, people stay in the office. You find people working overtime just because they feel good here.'' Instead of simply administering institutions such as the National Theater and National Library, the ministry has become an active patron of independent artists which works with foreign institutions to arrange funding. RENOVATIONS A SIGN OF HOPE Rama has already left his mark physically in Tirana. The city, without a cinema for much of the past 10 years, now has a plush, modern movie theater, built by private investors after Rama's ministry provided a financial guarantee. Italianate government buildings in the city center have been beautifully renovated, in marked contrast to the crumbling decay all around them, with funds arranged by a new office of national heritage created by Rama. ``This is very important psychologically,'' Rama says. ``It's not only that these buildings are beautiful, they are a sign of hope for people. When they see them, they have a feeling that something is starting.'' Not everything went smoothly. Musicians at the state opera staged a hunger strike this year in protest at subsidy cuts. The opposition Democratic Party, which ran Tirana for the last 10 years, denounced Rama as autocratic and phony. ``Rama's reforms amount only to a very expensive painting job,'' said former Culture Minister Teodor Laco. Rama shrugs off the criticism and insists that change, with all its risks, is better than stagnation. ``It is much better to accept new kinds of mistakes than to carry on with the mistakes which people have been making since 1944,'' he says. How will he tackle his new job? ``By doing things that are visible,'' Rama says. He will concentrate on reducing garbage, improving street lighting -- the city is often blacked out by power cuts -- and getting residents to feel Tirana belongs to them. ``If people realize you are committed and not corrupt, they will respect your efforts. If every businessman makes sure there is no garbage in front of his shop, there will be no more garbage. If the mayor gives them a model, they will do it.'' ``I had my first moment of hope in this town when I saw that some shopkeepers had repaired their sidewalks by themselves.'' He plans to hold radio phone-ins several times a month, broadcast city council meetings live on local radio and open up the city's accounts to convince a skeptical public that their elected representatives are not simply stealing their money. Rama, who acknowledges that simple narcissism is one of his motivations for being in politics, believes ordinary Albanians are saner and more realistic than most of their politicians. ``They have realized finally that capitalism is not paradise. They no longer expect the government to make them rich the next day,'' he says. ``They want some stability, peace, opportunities and they want examples of commitment.'' Rama no longer has time to paint but feels the often crazy world of Albanian politics has its own compensations. ``I think politics in Albania is the highest level of conceptual art,'' he said. _________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at http://profiles.msn.com.
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