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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.
During the 1920s, Albania experienced political instability and rapid succession of governments. In 1924 a revolutionary group took over by force, while six months later Ahmet Zogu crushed the revolution. In 1925, an Albanian Republic was declared under a constitution based mostly on the model of the Third French Republic. [9]
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 ...
Albania has a civil law system with influences from both the Napoleonic Code and the German Civil Code, by way of the Swiss Civil Code.The national Constitution, adopted by referendum in 1998, is the state's supreme law.
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.
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 ...
A person born in Albania to non-Albanian parents is an Albanian citizen if that person: Holds no other nationality at the time of birth (i.e., is stateless) Parents reside in Albania and consent to the acquisition of citizenship; Is adopted while a minor by an Albanian citizen residing in Albania; Effectively this means that:
Albania, as a whole, is considered to be rather conservative, especially in public reactions regarding lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender rights and visibility of LGBT people; however, anti-discrimination legislation have made ILGA-Europe regard Albania as one of a very few countries in Europe which explicitly bans discrimination on the ...