Tens of thousands of people don't just march through the streets of Tirana because they hate luxury hotels. They march because they feel like they're losing their country.
The massive protests rocking Albania over Jared Kushner’s proposed mega-resort have hit a boiling point. Over the weekend, the capital city saw its biggest crowds yet. Protesters filled the main boulevard, blocked roads, and surrounded Prime Minister Edi Rama’s office to demand his resignation. In similar news, take a look at: Why Police Keep Shooting Family Dogs And How We Stop It.
What started weeks ago as a localized environmental complaint has transformed into a full-blown national crisis. The movement even has a name now: the "Flamingo Revolution."
If you want to understand why a luxury resort backed by Affinity Partners—the investment firm run by Donald Trump's son-in-law—is causing a political earthquake in the Balkans, you have to look beyond the shiny architectural renderings. It's about sovereignty, local land rights, and a growing fury over how top-tier foreign capital gets treated compared to ordinary citizens. The Washington Post has provided coverage on this fascinating topic in great detail.
The Spark Behind the Flamingo Revolution
The core issue centers on two highly sensitive areas on Albania's southern Adriatic coast: Sazan Island, a former military base, and the Zvërnec peninsula near the Narta lagoon.
Ivanka Trump didn't help matters when she publicly referred to Sazan as a "private island" that she and Kushner "discovered." For locals, that phrasing stung. Sazan isn't a blank space on a map waiting for American billionaires to find it. It's public land.
Furthermore, the Narta lagoon area is a protected ecosystem. It serves as a vital habitat for Dalmatian pelicans, sea turtles, Mediterranean monk seals, and thousands of migratory flamingos. To voice their anger, demonstrators have been carrying cardboard cut-outs of flamingos through the streets, turning the pink bird into a symbol of defiance against corporate displacement.
The tension turned physical earlier this month when angry locals near the northern coast in Rrjoll—facing separate but similar luxury developments—literally tore down metal and razor-wire fences. Landowners like 56-year-old Zeke Nikolle Shullani have been vocal about the fact that their families have owned these coastal spaces for generations, only to see the government grant "special status investor" perks to wealthy outsiders while locals get cut out.
Corruption Probes and Environmental Red Flags
It's not just the public that's furious. Albania's Special Anti-Corruption Structure (SPAK) opened an investigation into how these coastal lands were reclassified.
In 2024, the Albanian government quietly altered its environmental laws, softening protections for coastal reserves. Critics argue these legal tweaks were tailor-made to pave the way for massive foreign investments like Kushner’s.
The European Union has already weighed in with a stern warning. Albania is actively trying to join the EU, but Brussels has made it clear that bypassing environmental standards to fast-track private luxury developments could tank the country's accession bids.
Rama Refuses to Back Down
Despite the roaring crowds chanting "Rama Leave!" outside his office, Prime Minister Edi Rama isn't budging.
He explicitly rejected calls to step down, arguing that changing course due to public pressure would make the government look unstable and harm EU negotiations. Rama claims the project will transform Albania into a premier high-end tourism destination, boosting the economy. He's even dismissed the backlash, suggesting that the anger is merely driven by Kushner’s political ties to Trump rather than actual ecological concerns.
But the sheer scale of the weekend protests proves this is no longer a niche activist issue. Diaspora communities have flown back to join the rallies. Average citizens are tired of seeing prime real estate handed over to foreign firms while local infrastructure lags.
What Happens Next
The standoff shows no signs of slowing down. If you're tracking this situation, keep an eye on these developments:
- Watch the SPAK Investigation: The anti-corruption probe into the 2024 land law changes could legally halt construction if prosecutors find evidence of targeted legislative corruption.
- EU Regulatory Pressure: Keep a close eye on statements from Brussels. If the EU explicitly threatens to pause Albania’s membership track over the Narta lagoon development, Rama's political leverage inside his own party might crumble.
- Local Legal Action: Watch for a wave of property rights lawsuits from local families claiming their land was wrongfully seized or undervalued to make room for the resort footprint.