TIRANA, Albania (AP) — Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama is vowing to press ahead with a luxury development linked to U.S. President Donald Trump ’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, despite a surge in protests against it there.
In an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday, Rama dismissed environmental objections as the result of misinformation and said the development was turning Albania from a country once ignored by investors into one “where the big capital wants to come and the big investors want to come.”
The government says the development would be transformational for the former communist nation as it seeks to enter the high-end tourism market and pushes for European Union membership.
But thousands of demonstrators have joined daily protests outside Rama’s office in the capital, Tirana, in recent days against the planned project that includes hotels, apartments, villas and a marina for yachts.
The prime minister said a formal environmental impact assessment has not started, even though work has begun to clear land inside a nature reserve.
Asked if he might step back from the project, Rama refused, adding, “Step back from what?”
Albania’s anti-corruption agency has opened an investigation related to the project. The government says the land is privately owned, but rival claims over its privatization have emerged.
Rama said Kushner’s proposal began by chance. He recalled a dinner in southern Albania with Kushner, his wife, Ivanka Trump, and friends who had stopped in the port of Durres to refuel their boat on the way to Montenegro.
Months later, Kushner approached him at a gathering of world leaders and business executives in Davos, Switzerland, and expressed interest in investing in Albania, Rama said.
“Your country’s absolutely stunning, and we would like to look for a chance to invest,” Rama recalled Kushner telling him.
An investment firm linked to Kushner has been granted special investor status by Albanian authorities.
The luxury project has two components: a coastal development in the Narta Lagoon area, which is a wildlife reserve, and a smaller resort on the nearby uninhabited island of Sazan, a communist-era military base.
Work has already begun to clear land inside a nature reserve used by migratory birds, prompting environmental groups to warn of the destruction of long-preserved habitats. Albania has 450 kilometers (280 miles) of coast that remained largely underdeveloped during decades of harsh communist rule.
Rama said a formal environmental impact assessment has not started because the plan for the development has not been finalized. He said international architects and environmental specialists are still shaping the proposal.
“When it comes to the environment, there is no project yet, there is no environmental impact assessment yet, because this is still a planning process,” he said.
He argued that Albania has a strong conservation record, pointing to bans on hunting and logging that he said helped flamingo populations recover.
“We have fantastic documentation of how the wildlife in Albania came back thanks to the 10 years moratorium of hunting,” Rama said.
Since late May, excavators and other heavy machinery have entered the planned development area, opening access routes, digging into the sand, clearing land among pine trees and installing fencing.
The prime minister suggested that some of the backlash to the project was being amplified by outside interference, citing what he described as a long-running Iranian cyber campaign against Albania.
Albania has long accused Iran of backing hackers who attack the country’s cyber infrastructure, after Albania sheltered members of an Iranian opposition group. Tehran has denied the allegations.
“There is a lot of manipulation. There is a lot of half-truths that become bigger and bigger lies by the hour,” he said.
He emphasized that he was not accusing individual protesters of acting as foreign agents.
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