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1. The fundamental rights and freedoms and the duties contemplated in this Constitution for Albanian citizens are also valid for foreigners and stateless persons in the territory of the Republic of Albania, except for cases when the Constitution specifically attaches the exercise of particular rights and freedoms with Albanian citizenship. 2.
Human rights in Albania are violated by the Government which have targeted the Greek minority population via police and secret service according to Human Rights organisations. [7] Greek communities have been targeted by development projects and had their homes demolished in alleged ethnic targeting Greeks from Southern Albania, [ 8 ] where ...
Part I of the Constitution defines Albania as a unitary parliamentary republic as well as a secular state, in which elections are free, equal and periodic. II: Fundamental Human Rights and Freedoms: The fundamental human rights and freedoms are indivisible, inalienable, and inviolable and stand at the base of the entire juridical order. III ...
Separately, the commissioner for human rights at the Council of Europe – a human rights watchdog that is not part of the EU – also raised concerns on Thursday about the Italy-Albania agreement.
Italy's government is hailing as "historic" a plan to send seaborne migrants to Albania, but experts and opposition politicians warn that the it could face significant bureaucratic and human ...
The system of government in the Republic of Albania is based on the separation and balancing of legislative, executive and judicial powers. — Article 8 — 1. The Republic of Albania protects the national rights of the Albanian people who live outside its borders. 2.
Women's rights in Albania This page was last edited on 12 May 2022, at 21:32 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
The Central Committee for Defending Albanian Rights (Albanian: Komiteti Qendror për Mbrojtjen e të Drejtave Shqiptare, Turkish: Arnavut Haklarını Savunmak Merkez Komitesi) was formed in the city of Istanbul, Turkey, then Ottoman Empire on December 18, 1877, by an influential group of Albanian intellectuals, patriots, and politicians, such as Hasan Tahsini, Abdyl Frashëri, Vesel Dino ...