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Albanian PM seeks to stop judiciary from suspending ministers

By Thomson Reuters Feb 16, 2026 | 9:06 AM

(Corrects headline to replace “dismissing” with “suspending”)

TIRANA, Feb 16 (Reuters) – Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama said his government would change the law to protect ministers from suspension while they ​are under criminal investigation, prompting the opposition to accuse ‌him of trying to protect himself and harming judicial independence.

A court suspended Rama’s deputy, Belinda Balluku, in November following her indictment by Albania’s anti-graft prosecutors, known as SPAK, over alleged meddling in a tender for infrastructure projects, ‌which ​she denies.

The case has sparked a ⁠dispute between SPAK, which has ⁠asked parliament to lift Balluku’s immunity to allow her arrest, and Rama, who has complained about judicial overreach, especially with pre-trial detentions.

Albania aims to join the European Union by ​2030 but the bloc says the country must do more to fight crime and corruption.

Rama’s Socialist Party, which last year ⁠secured a fourth consecutive term, has ⁠a comfortable parliamentary majority and it is unclear ​if and when the assembly will lift the immunity of Balluku, ​who also served as an infrastructure minister and is ‌a close ally of the prime minister.

“The moment a minister is dismissed not only is one person dismissed but the whole work of that institution,” Rama told his party lawmakers on Monday, announcing ⁠the plan to change the law.

The opposition has staged a series of protests in recent months in the capital Tirana to demand ⁠Balluku’s resignation. On Monday ‌they said Rama was seeking to control ⁠judicial proceedings in his favour with the amendments.

“This ​is ‌nothing more than an attempt by Rama to ​protect himself, ⁠blowing up both the independence of the judiciary and the separation of powers… because behind Balluku and her wrongdoings stands Rama,” the main opposition Democratic Party said in a statement to Reuters.

(Reporting by Florion Goga, writing by Fatos Bytyci; editing by Angeliki Koutantou ​and Gareth Jones)