Albanian PM fires deputy as corruption investigation heats up


FILE PHOTO: Supporters of the Albanian opposition hold lights aloft during an anti-government protest, triggered by a corruption investigation into Deputy Prime Minister Belinda Balluku, near the Prime Minister's office in Tirana, Albania, January 24, 2026. REUTERS/Florion Goga/File Photo

TIRANA, Feb 26 (Reuters) - Albanian Prime ⁠Minister Edi Rama late on Thursday dismissed his deputy, Belinda Balluku, ⁠who faces accusations of manipulating public tenders, allegations that have sparked ‌opposition protests.

A special prosecution office targeting corruption and organised crime, known as SPAK, indicted Balluku in December on suspicion of interfering in the awarding of two construction contracts in 2021 worth ​more than 200 million euros.

Parliament is expected to ⁠decide on March 5 whether to ⁠eliminate her immunity, which would allow SPAK to arrest her. Albania, which wants ⁠to ‌join the European Union by 2030, faces pressure from the bloc to tackle corruption.

Balluku, who held the positions of deputy prime minister ⁠and infrastructure minister, denies wrongdoing.

Rama, who has been in ​power since 2013, stood ‌by her for months and did not give a reason for ⁠dismissing her on ​Thursday in a reshuffle of seven roles in his Socialist Party administration including the defense and foreign ministers.

"The Prime Minister has clarified since the beginning of this term ⁠that reshuffles might be more frequent, while the ​last nearly four months he has refused three times the resignation of Mrs. Balluku," government spokesperson, Manjola Hasa, told Reuters in an emailed statement

Balluku has been seen ⁠as a rising star who was favored by Rama as a potential successor. Since her indictment, the country's biggest opposition party, the Democratic Party, has held protests demanding the resignation of Rama, whose government has been hit by several ​corruption scandals over the last year.

Protesters have thrown ⁠petrol bombs, and police and demonstrators have been injured.

European Union officials have told Reuters ​they were looking closely atRama's handling of ‌corruption cases and that the country's fight against crime ​and corruption are critical to the Balkan country's bid to join the bloc by 2030.

(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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