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USIA - Burns: Situation in Albania has Deteriorated Significantly, 97-03-14

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From: The United States Information Agency (USIA) Gopher at <gopher://gopher.usia.gov>


BURNS: SITUATION IN ALBANIA HAS DETERIORATED SIGNIFICANTLY

(Special State Department briefing of March 14) (730)

By Jane A. Morse
USIA Diplomatic Correspondent

Washington -- The chaos in Albania has gotten worse, suspending efforts by the United States to evacuate U.S. citizens and other foreigners, says State Department Spokesman Nicholas Burns.

During a special briefing March 14, Burns said: "It's very clear, from reports from our embassy in Albania that public order has broken down, not only throughout the country, but specifically in the capital, Tirana. And while there is a new national government of national reconciliation that has been named, all reports...continue to lead to one conclusion: The situation in Albania has deteriorated significantly."

Before rescue efforts by the U.S. military were suspended for security reasons, CH46 helicopters were able to airlift some 500 civilians from Tirana, Burns said. Most were Americans, but he said 18 different nationalities were represented in the group. Twenty Americans were able to escape by foot to Macedonia, according to Burns. The U.S. government estimates are that there are about 2,000 U.S. private American citizens in Albania, most living in Tirana.

Burns emphasized that although nonessential personnel and dependents are being evacuated from the U.S. Embassy, Ambassador Marisa Lino and 17 State Department officials will stay in Tirana to aid Americans and to try to work with the Albanian government in resolving the conflict.

In the meantime, the international community is struggling to find a way to restore order to the near-anarchy that exists in Europe's most impoverished country.

Former Austrian Chancellor Franz Vranitzky, delegation leader for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), met on an Italian ship in the Adriatic with Albania's Prime Minister Bashkim Fino, the foreign minister, and members from the Albanian general staff. They are trying, according to Burns, to "give some impetus to the Albanian government to pull itself together, to reassert public order in the capital city and throughout the country."

NATO members are meeting to coordinate efforts to evacuate foreigners.

Burns discounted rumors of inserting an international military force. "I don't believe there's an outside military force anywhere in the world that could impose order in every town and village and hamlet in Albania over the weekend," Burns said. The restoration of peace, he emphasized, "has to start with a political process. It has to start with the government leaders -- both the government of President Berisha and the opposition leaders...deciding that they're going to try to reimpose an element of civil order and political order throughout the country, and that they're going to set up a process, a political process whereby the country's problems can be talked about and elections can be held."

The crisis in Albania began some six weeks ago, with the collapse of fraudulent investment schemes that left thousands of Albanians penniless. People took to the streets calling for the government to restore their losses and demanding the resignation of President Sali Berisha. Berisha remains in Tirana, according to Burns, although some members of his family have fled the country. He is reported to have acknowledged his lack of control over his military forces as well as the people.

Burns said that the U.S. government urges "all Albanian citizens to support their government and to work for a political resolution to the current problems in Albania.

"We call on all sides, including the mobs in the street, to exercise restraint, to observe the general amnesty, and to observe the principles of nonviolence...and to work through the political process.

"Nothing good will come from tearing down Albania," Burns said. "Albania must be preserved as a state. And the government, we think -- this broad- based national government -- is the best chance for all Albanians to try to work out their problems.

"Those who have taken up arms should understand that only by committing themselves to a democratic political process and by laying down their weapons, can they create conditions in which all of us, beyond Albania, can be helpful to them. There is the possibility of Western economic aid through the World Bank, through the International Monetary Fund, through the United States and other governments, but that kind of assistance cannot arrive in a situation of chaos and disorder and civil war. And that's our message to the Albanian people, particularly those who are in the streets today."


From the United States Information Agency (USIA) Gopher at gopher://gopher.usia.gov


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