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Albanian actor sues government for using her image as “AI minister”

By Thomson Reuters Feb 13, 2026 | 7:58 AM

By Fatos Bytyci and Florion Goga

TIRANA, Feb 13 (Reuters) – An Albanian actor is suing the government for using her face and voice to create the avatar for an “AI minister” – a virtual member ​of the cabinet.

When Edi Rama began his fourth term as ‌Albania’s prime minister last September, he also unveiled an AI-generated virtual minister, “Diella” – sun in Albanian –  to oversee the awarding of government contracts as a step to fight corruption.

Diella features the face and voice of Anila Bisha, a film and theatre actor who ‌says she ​never gave consent for her likeness to ⁠be used that way, and ⁠it has led to harassment online and unwanted attention in the street.

“First I was surprised, smiled and I said it must be a joke,” Bisha told Reuters. “Now people call me Diella and they consider me ​as just another minister of the government.”

She says she allowed her likeness to be used last year to create an AI-powered virtual assistant ⁠for a government website to help citizens ⁠and businesses get state documents, but not as a ​virtual politician on the prime minister’s team.

“People who don’t like the prime minister, ​now they also hate me.”

The government denies using her likeness ‌improperly. The “lawsuit is nonsense, but we welcome the opportunity to solve it once and for all in a court of law,” the government’s press office said in response to questions from Reuters.

The Albanian government’s public image has ⁠been battered since December after a special prosecution unit indicted Rama’s deputy, Belinda Balluku, for meddling in tenders for infrastructure projects, which she denies.

Diella’s image appears ⁠in the first row ‌of the cabinet list on the government’s website, next ⁠to photos of Rama and Balluku.

A court is expected ​to ‌rule on Monday whether to order the government to ​stop using ⁠her image. Her lawyer, Aranit Roshi, said Bisha is seeking 1 million euros in damages.

“The law says that in cases of personal data violation, penalties for state institutions are up to 21 million euros so our request for 1 million is a reasonable amount,” he said.

(Reporting by Fatos Bytyci and Florion GogaEditing ​by Peter Graff)