Wednesday, June 03, 2026

‘Nation is Not For Sale’: Thousands of Albanians Protest Kushner Resort Plans in Protected Wetland

“Barbed wire cannot silence people,” said one conservationist. “A protected landscape of global importance is under attack, and people are demanding an end to the devastation.”



Protesters gather under the slogan “Albania is not for sale”, asking for the resignation of Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, in front of Albanian Government building on June 2, 2026 in Tirana, Albania.

(Photo by Armando Babani/Getty Images)

Stephen Prager
Jun 03, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

As President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner moves forward with plans to build a luxury resort on one of the last untouched parts of the Mediterranean coast, thousands of Albanians have taken to the streets in protest.

On Tuesday evening, a throng gathered outside the office of Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama in the capital Tirana, holding inflatable flamingos and signs reading “Nation is not for sale” and “I don’t want Albania like Dubai,” Reuters reported.

Kushner’s investment firm, Affinity Partners, is seeking to build a €1.4 billion ($1.6 billion) resort on the uninhabited island of Sazan and around 10,000 hotel rooms and villas along a stretch of coastline near the protected wetland of Vjosa-Narta.


According to BirdLife International:
The area shelters over 70 endangered species and more than 200 bird species, including flamingos and Dalmatian pelicans. It sits on the Adriatic Flyway, a critical migration corridor for millions of birds traveling between Africa and Europe each year. The surrounding waters are among the last Mediterranean refuges for the Mediterranean monk seal, one of the world’s most endangered marine mammals, and a key nesting ground for the loggerhead sea turtle.

In February 2024, Albania’s parliament amended its protected areas law to allow the development of luxury resorts. Just weeks later, Kushner announced plans to build in Albania, which spurred an investigation by anti-corruption prosecutors.

Kushner himself has not been accused of any wrongdoing, but protesters view the construction of the sprawling complex as a symbol of the country being sold out to powerful oligarchs without their consent.

“We have a protected area, but above all, our state has allowed construction work to continue without consultation and without transparency,” said Klajdi Belo, an activist who attended a demonstration on Monday, told Euronews.

Activists have said bulldozers have begun tearing through the coastline and gravel has already been dumped on age-old sand dunes—damage that could take hundreds of years to repair. Meanwhile, a large barbed-wire fence has been erected, blocking public access to the beach.



Over the weekend, protesters assembled outside the barricades surrounding the development near the coastal village of Zvërnec.

“Don’t defend the oligarchs!” one man was seen shouting into a megaphone. “Those are the citizens’ properties!”

During these protests, a video captured an activist being dragged along the ground by a group of black-shirted security contractors.

“There is great public outrage over what is happening in Albania, but the spark was what happened in Zvërnec,” said Arilda Lleshi, who said the man and others were there because they were “protesting against a fence that had been installed there illegally.”

As activists have called for heavy machines to be removed from the protected area, Rama has said no amount of public backlash will lead him to abandon the project.

“Under no circumstances do we receive the stigma of being ⁠a country where investors are met with hostility,” he said in a statement to Reuters. “There is absolutely no chance that the investment will stop as long as I am here.”

Anouk Puymartin, head of policy for BirdLife Europe and Central Asia, said that it’s not just the habitat of endangered species at stake, but the question of whether longstanding environmental protections can be shredded at the whim of the wealthy.

“Barbed wire cannot silence people. Thousands have taken to the streets of Tirana to defend Vjosa-Narta from destruction driven by private profit,” Puymartin said. “A protected landscape of global importance is under attack, and people are demanding an end to the devastation.”



Ivanka Trump, the US president’s daughter and Kushner’s wife, has come under scrutiny for her comments about the development project recently, which were blasted as “out of touch.”

In a recent interview, the Trump heiress described being inspired to purchase the island of Sazan while vacationing there years ago: “We were on a friend’s boat, and we stopped for a swim. Effectively, that’s how we found it. We swam to the islands. We went on a hike, barefoot all the way, up to the top. And we were just captivated.”

She described the project of developing the island as part of an effort to “help realize its potential” and described it as “the culmination of all of my experience in real estate, all of my travel, a lot of reflection on how I want to live.”

But Puymartin describes the project as an encroachment by private wealth onto land that was previously held for the benefit of everyone.

“Nature belongs to everyone, not a handful of investors,” she said. “The horrendous situation in Vjosa-Narta shows why laws are crucial to protect both people and nature. But those protections mean little if governments fail to uphold them.”

'Go home!' Ivanka Trump inundated with backlash over dubious private island scheme

David Edwards
June 3, 2026 
RAW STORY


Ivanka Trump waves during a world leaders' summit on ending the Gaza war, in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, October 13, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

Thousands of Albanians have taken to the streets — and the internet — to rage against a planned luxury resort linked to Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner, with protesters demanding the government cancel the project and chanting "Ivanka, go home."

The flashpoint is a proposed €4 billion ($4.7 billion) development — described by Prime Minister Edi Rama as an "extraordinary investment" — on Sazan Island and the protected Vjosa-Narta coastal wetlands in southern Albania. Ivanka described it in dreamy terms on a recent podcast.

"It's an unbelievable, beautiful, 1,400-hectare private island in the middle of the Mediterranean," she told host David Senra. "We swam to the island, we went on a hike, barefoot all the way up to the top, and we were just captivated."

She did not mention the protests.

On the ground in Albania, the mood was rather less romantic. Anadolu Agency reported thousands gathering in Tirana under the slogan "Albania is not for sale." TV Klan presenter Leftioni Peristere flagged AFP wire coverage of the demonstrations, which have now stretched into a fourth consecutive day — with police firing water cannons at crowds that included children.

One Albanian, posting a video of the country's stunning Adriatic coastline, put the stakes simply: "Do you know what we are protesting for?"

Another, in a widely shared video, was blunter. "All the blood, sweat, and tears that our people and ancestors have fought for is being sold by a leader who has betrayed us," he said, calling out Prime Minister Edi Rama by name.

Protest crowds have echoed that sentiment, chanting "Thieves!" and demanding Rama's arrest by SPAK — Albania's Special Anti-Corruption Prosecutors, who opened a formal investigation into the project this week.

Ivanka told Senra the resort is "the culmination of all of my experience in real estate, all of my travel, a lot of reflection on how I want to live, how I think people increasingly want to live."

Albanians, it seems, have thoughts about that too.




Jared Kushner's luxury resort hit with anti-corruption probe as protests explode: report

Nicole Charky-Chami
June 1, 2026 
RAW STORY


Jared Kushner looks on during a swearing-in ceremony of Special Envoy Steve Witkoff in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C. on May 6, 2025. 
REUTERS/Kent Nishimura

Jared Kushner's luxury coastal resort project in Albania was under investigation by the country's anti-corruption prosecutors amid growing protests against the development, Politico reported on Monday.

President Donald Trump's son-in-law is the head of Affinity Partners, a private equity firm behind a project slated to include 10,000 hotel rooms located "on the uninhabited Adriatic island of Sazan and several hundred hectares of the Vjosa-Narta protected landscape, a sensitive coastal wetland area home to flamingos, seals and sea turtle nesting sites," according to Politico.

Albania's special anti-corruption prosecution office, SPAK, said it had launched a probe into the change in land ownership in 2024, as questions have been raised about the land's protected status.

Kushner is married to Trump's daughter Ivanka Trump and has a multi-billion dollar real estate portfolio. He has been serving as the president's special envoy for peace and has been involved in negotiations involving Iran, Gaza and the war in Ukraine, which has raised eyebrows among critics over potential conflicts of interest.

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama has confirmed to Politico that the negotiations around the project were ongoing. He has "denied that the project encroaches on a protected wildlife reserve and said that the final proposal has yet to be submitted and the environmental study is not complete."

Protests have broken out in the country over the project since May, with people calling for the project to be halted and to protect the area. Activists have also called for the prime minister to resign.

Some of the demonstrations have become violent.

"Footage emerged — after protests Saturday — of private security guards appearing to assault and then drag a protester along a cliff, while threatening other demonstrators who attempted to remove fences and halt construction," Politico reported.



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