Albanian PM Edi Rama Compares Protesters to Nazis, Calls Them 'Hajvans'
Quick Look
- Albanian PM Edi Rama compared the "Flamingo Revolution" protest movement to Nazi Germany, calling participants "hajvans" (a derogatory term for uncivilized people).
- The protests, now in their 14th day, have grown into large anti-government demonstrations demanding Rama's resignation.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama made strong remarks against a protest movement, comparing it to Nazi Germany and using derogatory terms for the participants. The protests have been ongoing for two weeks and have grown significantly.
Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama railed against the “Flamingo Revolution” on Sunday, comparing the protest movement to Nazi Germany and referring to the protesters as “hajvan” — a derogatory Albanian term roughly meaning “stupid as animals” or “uncivilized people.”
“This is fascist, it is scandalous, and it must be stopped,” Rama said during his podcast on Sunday. “And it is stopped by not backing down in the face of these kinds of pressures and these kinds of hajvans,” he added.
“This must be stopped,” Rama emphasized.
The remarks come as the political unrest entered its 14th consecutive day as Albanians flooded Tirana over the weekend in the largest demonstration yet, calling for the prime minister’s resignation.
Saturday’s protest saw an estimated 100,000-200,000 people take to the streets. They have remained peaceful, attended by children, the elderly and families, and even including an area for children to draw and paint.
Now in its second straight week, the protest has transformed from demands for the cancellation of a Jared Kushner-linked luxury resort into one of the largest anti-government demonstrations that Albania has seen since the fall of communism in 1991.
Rama called the protests a “fascist spirit” that paints a message of Albania belonging to Albanians, “meaning that everyone else outside that is not welcome — just as Germany was ‘for the Germans’ and then became Europe’s ‘black sheep’ for years and years afterward,” he added.
Demonstrations in support of the “Flamingo Revolution” were set to continue both worldwide and in Tirana on Sunday, with rallies planned from New York and Berlin to Vienna and London.
Alice Taylor contributed reporting.
Open Questions
- What specific demands led to the initial "Flamingo Revolution"?
- What is the nature of Jared Kushner's link to the resort?
- What is the government's response to the ongoing protests beyond Rama's statements?






