|
South East European (S.E.E.) Up-Date 24
Albania
December 1999
UN/UNDP What's new?
 | The UNDP/UNOPS Gender in Development project sponsored three
conferences in December aimed at helping the Government to prepare for the Beijing + 5
Conference to be held in July 2000. The conferences were facilitated by the Committee for
Women and Family, and the Parliamentary Subcommission for Youth and Women, and dealt with:
Women in Decision Making; Women and the Economy; and Trafficking and Prostitution. Among
the issues discussed was the Stability Pact Gender Task Force, supported by UNDP
and OSCE, which will establish guidelines for increasing womens participation in
elected government and a legal framework for inclusion and training of women in decision
making structures. Over sixty NGOs, the Prime Minister, the Minister of the Interior and
the UNDP Resident Representative attended.
|
 | The UNDP/UNCTAD project supporting the Debt Management
Department of the Ministry of Finance, ended on 31 December with both the IMF and the
Government expressing satisfaction with the functioning of the newly created Foreign Debt
Management Unit within the Ministry. The Government has requested that UNDP support a
follow-on project of training and assistance to integrate DMFAS software into the internal
system of debt management, bringing it to international standards.
|
Political/Economic/Social Developments
 | The Ministry of Finance announced expected GDP growth for 2000
to be eight percent, and a rise in inflation from zero (due to the influx of humanitarian
aid during the Kosovo crisis) to three percent.
|
 | President Rexhep Meidani received scalding criticism from the
opposition Democratic Party for a week-long trip to China during which he met with
Chinese Premier Jiang Zemin. China has reportedly promised grants to Albania worth about
10 million yuan (approx. USD 1.2 million) despite a divergence of positions on the Kosovo
issue.
|
 | An Albanian delegation, led by the chairman of the ruling socialist
party and former Prime Minister Fatos Nano, visited the Yugoslav Republic of Montenegro
in mid-December. The delegation met with Montenegrin Foreign Minister Branko Perovic and
discussed an Economic and Trade cooperation Agreement as well as joint projects within the
framework of the Stability Pact. The border between Albania and Montenegro remains sealed
by Yugoslav troops, halting once-vigorous trade and seriously damaging the economy of
northwestern Albania.
|
 | Albanians have rung in the New Millennium peacefully, without
the rampant gunfire that marred New Years Eve celebrations in recent years.
|
*Information sources include ATA (Albanian Telegraphic Agency) and
Albanian Daily News.
|