"The future is born in the West", the departure of the youth is "graying" Albania

Teacher Erjon Muça

Author: Denis Tahiri

Until the day I saw the portrait of her 5-year-old daughter in one of the British media, I had never taken seriously one of my best friends, who told me that she would try anything to get to the UK .

The 34-year-old, educated and employed until the day she ran away, didn't think twice when given the chance to illegally cross the English Channel by boat to where she believes she and her little one will be. have a better future. Her story is more or less the story of thousands of Albanians who have risked every way to set foot on British soil. "40% of illegal immigrants who cross the channel to Great Britain are from Albania, a country at peace and not devastated by war", wrote "Daily Mail", referring to a report of the intelligence service of the British army. According to the paper, “Only for a period of 6 weeks in the summer, 1,075 Albanians crossed to Great Britain by boat".

Albanian immigrants in the Strait of La Mans towards Britain

Other prestigious English media, such as "The Sun" have also reported on new methods of crossing the border, while the problem of Albanian immigrants who entered the United Kingdom illegally turned into such a big issue that governments were forced to deal with each other.

A few months ago Albanian Center for Quality Journalism would report on this problem, bringing the story of a 19-year-old who had made this trip recently.

The moment illegal immigrants touch UK soil

But Albania is not only facing departures through illegal immigration. During the last years, a large part of qualified young people are leaving for Europe as well as the USA and Canada through employment.

Across the Atlantic…

The United States of America remains the promised land for many Albanians, who massively apply for the American lottery. But the history of Albanian immigration to the USA dates back to 1876, while today in the USA there is no exact figure on the number of the Albanian community there. A report from a few years ago puts it between 250 and 500. Meanwhile in the same report it is said that the number of Albanian-Americans a few years ago was about 215 thousand, about 87 thousand of the first generation who were born in Albania and about 127 thousand of the second generation, who were born in the USA.

Pictured/ Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Even Canada has a significant number of Albanian residents. In the census conducted in 2016, about 36 thousand residents declared that they are of Albanian origin. About 72% of them live mainly in the province of Ontario. One of these residents is Gentiani, a 35-year-old architect. "I immigrated with a work visa first, a relative of mine helped me by finding me a job here and adapting to my new life didn't take me more than 2 months. he says, adding with humor that Ontario's cold was a bit of a problem at first, but now it's a cold I can't live without. Gentiani says that there is a large community of Albanians in Ontario and that he hopes to soon be able to attract his brother and sister. "I really hope I can attract the sister and brother too. Here is another quality of life. You really work hard, you are taxed, but you have the Services, you have security, so you can live peacefully", he says. And when asked if he is thinking about returning to Albania in the future, he says that: "I love that country so much, but to go back again it will be very difficult. I know what they say, never say never, but it will be very difficult for me to return to live in Albania".

Doctors and nurses to Europe

For EG, a 27-year-old, emigration was a clear objective after finishing nursing school. Working conditions, salaries and the inability to grow in career were the reasons. "Working conditions are extremely good. From the day I started working here until now, approximately 4 years, only trainings for my professional growth provided by the hospital have been over 8". the news shows, adding that the economic conditions are very good. "The salary that I receive is a salary that I never dreamed that I could ever receive in Albania". she says.

 Meanwhile, the creation of a lack of white shirts due to the departure of doctors and nurses unofficially also accepts an official of the Ministry of Health. "We have had and continue to have shortages of various specialties, especially in municipal hospitals. If you go to a municipal hospital today, you can most likely find the cardiologist, resuscitators, etc. absent. There have been investments, it's not that there haven't been, but it's the doctors themselves who, as soon as they finish, ask to leave, after being realistic, the conditions outside are much better than what we can offer". he says.

What do the figures of the emigrants say?

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) provides accurate immigration figures for Albanians. According to IOM the total number of immigrants who have arrived in Albania is 49,160, but it is a figure which has suffered a continuous decline since 2015. Meanwhile, when it comes to Albanian citizens who have emigrated, this figure reaches 1,250,451. According to the same source, the share of Albanians who left constitute 43.4% of the Albanian population.

Data according to IOM

According to the Albanian Institute of Statistics, the number of people who have left the country since 2016 has always been increasing, except for 2020 where there was a significant decrease, this is also due to the difficulty of immigration procedures, as well as the closing of borders as a consequence of Covid 19. In 2016, 32,533 Albanian citizens left Albania, while this figure increased in 2017, where the number of those who left has reached 39,905. While the highest figure of those leaving the country was recorded in 2019 according to ISTAT with 43,835 people, followed by 23,854 citizens in 2020 and 42,048 in 2021.

Source: INSTAT

But in Albania there is also a trend of leaving the Albanian citizenship, where the figure of leaving the citizenship is greater than that of obtaining it, which in most cases is the second citizenship.

According to INSTAT in 2021, the number of persons who have acquired Albanian citizenship is 711, on the other hand, the number of Albanian citizens who have renounced Albanian citizenship is 724. But as reflected in the table above, the number of persons who have renounced their citizenship from of 2017 was greater than that of those who benefited from it.

On the other hand, according to the data of EUROSTAT, the number of Albanian citizens who received a citizenship of the European Union in 2020 has had an increase of 146% greater than that of 2010.By the end of 2020, there were 3.8 million citizens of candidate and potential candidate countries for the EU with a valid residence permit to stay in the EU. This is 6% less than at the end of 2010. About 2/5 are citizens of Turkey, with 41%, 1/5 citizens of Albania with 22%, 11% of citizens of Serbia, citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina are also in the same value. 9% of residence permits are held by the citizens of Kosovo, and 5% and 1% respectively by the citizens of North Macedonia and Montenegro", it is stated in Eurostat data.

Experts speak: Albania is graying, society is weakening

Finding a reason for the departure of so many citizens from the country is impossible, as there are a number of reasons that lead to the departures. The professor of sociology, Gëzim Tushi, says that there are many reasons, reasons of a geo-political and economic character, that have to do with the differences in the standard of living between Albania and the countries of the European Union.

In the photo/ Young people in Tirana

"They have to do with the fact that Albanians live in Albania and their hopes are European, they have to do with a process of very fast Europeanization of Albanian youth who can no longer afford this Balkan mentality of slow movement at a snail's pace, but they want to compete with European developments", says the professor. He adds that the policies related to employment in the treatment of specialists, with certain priority policies that are necessary for the development of the economy, education, science, health, etc., are determining factors that affect precisely the existence of a phenomenon such as the departure of young people and people from Albania.

Sociologist Gëzim Tushi

"I think that the time of a banal patriotism or the time of such nonsense that we stay here because this is my homeland does not go into the 21st century. I always say that the homeland is the one where a person lives better, that's how they understood this". says the professor, adding that this is a real thesis that suits global society and globalization processes today.

And while Albania is turning into a "society with gray hair" as Professor Tushi says, what can be the solution to stop this bleeding of Albanian citizens towards the EU and developed western countries? "We need a complex national strategy, where I believe that both the position and the opposition should think about what is happening to our country, that this issue is not an economic issue, it has to do with the labor market, with the emptying of the labor market or the vacuum that is being created with certain professions such as medicine, nursing, the academic world, etc." concludes Gëzim Tushi.

Sociology Marsida Simo

"On the one hand, the weak economy is a driving factor, and on the other hand, developed countries are the pulling factor. Most studies show that emigration is mainly motivated by economic factors", says sociologist Marsida Simo. According to her, given that Albania is a developing country, the alternatives to choose, increase and encourage employment are under development. "At this point young people have received the message that they are not offered the opportunities they are looking for. The decision to emigrate is often linked to political stability, which does not give priority to education as much as it is necessary", she says. For the sociologist Simo, emigration can be reduced by promoting education, especially professional education, promoting employment opportunities, promoting self-employment, improving health care and infrastructure, etc.

 

Economic expert Zef Preçi describes the departure of young people as well as specialized people as a complex problem. in the process of recruiting public servants and in general in the public sector, patronageists and militants constantly predominate. There is little or no room for the qualified, the idealistic, the citizens who hope and dream of a future within the country.", he argues.

The expert, Zef Preçi

According to him, the overcoming of this situation should be mainly related to the improvement of the business climate, the promotion of political debate and, above all, the encouragement of free, private initiative. "Without freeing the business climate from the shackles of state intervention from the control of oligarchs, from the influence of lobbyists on the control of natural resources and budget funds, it is difficult to expect an improved climate that absorbs cheap and skilled labor., he concludes.

On the other hand, the lecturer Rezart Prifti speaks with numbers about the departure of Albanians. "In a recent study that was included, it turns out that 60% of those with higher education have left Albania in the last 10 years, so we have lost 2/3 of all those who create added value in economic processes and social of this country", he says adding that in the macro this explains the catastrophe of the next 10 years. "In micro, in your daily life and mine, this explains the weakness that has gripped Albanian society. In every little aspect," he says.

Teacher Rezar Prifti

But the situation does not seem at all optimistic for the academic staff either, where according to the Priest, 54% of the academic staff have left, that is, of the academic employees in pedagogical functions in universities. "The university of Korça, Gjirokastra and Shkodra has been completely dismantled. There is a mass exodus from the University of Tirana, but they replace them quickly without criteria and therefore do not stand out", he says, adding that the reasons for running away are very evident. "The institution of education is missing here, the meritocracy that comes as a consequence of the lack of education is missing, that those people who make the meritocratic system when they have no work culture will hire someone who is not for work because he does not know how to get the job done.", he concludes.

Teacher Erjon Muça

The lack of mirtocracy, working conditions, lack of law and order, Services, are reasons given by the pastor Erjon Muça. But the question of whether Albanians who are well educated and have chosen to leave for all the above-mentioned reasons will return to their homeland, he finds very difficult.

"I do not believe in the return of intellectuals, especially those who have had a status and a profession in Albania and have accumulated an important experience of several years in their profession so that at a certain moment they return. Even if they return, their return will be temporary, as part of some international program and as temporary workers, with one or two year contracts". says Professor Muca who says he sees a high margin of Albanians educated abroad, but facing disappointment here may force them to leave Albania again.

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