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Kur në verë të vitit 1999 refugjatët serbë nga Kosova kanë ardhur në Beograd shumë shpejt "është zbuluar" se sa është numri i vërtetë i shqiptarëve në këtë qytet, dhe për këtë serbët e Kosovës janë zhgënjyer sepse më parë i kanë dëgjuar rrëfimet "se në Beograd jetojnë afro 100.000 shqiptarë dhe që serbë të ...
Municipalities are considered the basic administrative division of Albania. [1] Since its Declaration of Independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1912, Albania has reorganized internal administration 21 times. From independence until the year 2000, regional government was organized into regions (rrethë) of varying numbers, size, and importance.
The Macedonians in Albania (Albanian: Maqedonasit në Shqipëri; Macedonian: Македонци во Албанија, romanized: Makedonci vo Albanija) are an officially recognized ethnic minority. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] According to the data from the census held in 2023, there are 2,281 ethnic Macedonians in Albania.
Fletorja Zyrtare is the official government journal of the Republic of Albania.Published in a bulletin format, the journal is under the editorial oversight of the Official Publishing Center (Albanian: Qendra e Botimeve Zyrtare – QBZ) which is the only institution in the country authorized for its publication. [1]
In Albania, it is also estimated that emigrant remittances account for 18% of GDP or $530 million annually, though declining in the late 2000s. [12] Those who have come back have opened micro-enterprises, while the proximity of Greece and Italy to Albania, where more than half of immigrants are located has contributed to continuous labor ...
Vodafone Albania, as per Q1 2019, has 3.66 million subscribers, out of which there are 2.5 million active users. An active user is defined as having communication in the last three months. [3] The regulatory authority for telecommunication in Albania is the Electronic and Postal Communications Authority.
Most Ashkali live in Kosovo, but they also reside in Serbia and Montenegro, while most Balkan Egyptians are thought to live in North Macedonia and Albania, rather than Kosovo. In the Macedonian census of 2002, 3,713 people identified as Egyptian, while in the Serbian census of 2002 (excluding Kosovo), 814 people identified as Egyptian.
Albanians in North Macedonia are of interest to Albania. [2] In the 1990s, issues revolving around the Albanian community fueled concerns in Albania of destabilisation in the new Macedonian state and possible Serbian intervention. [2] Albania, through President Sali Berisha became one of the early states to recognise Macedonia in April 1993. [2]