Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni kept his word: don’t go to Albania. Indeed, today the prime minister arrived in Vlora, in the south of the country, on 14 August for a quick visit and an informal meeting with Albanian prime minister Edi Rama. “Giorgia Meloni will also take a little vacation in Albania,” said the leader of the land of the Eagles, after inviting Foglio to spend a few days with his family in Albania a few days ago. The prime minister then said he would come and do everything to welcome the Tirana prime minister. And so he did.
The leader of the Italian right left Brindisi for Albania, crossing the Adriatic on a scheduled ferry. Meloni left the farm with her family in Ceglie Messapica in Puglia this morning to go to Vlora with her daughter and partner. During the short visit, Meloni and Rama will have an informal meeting at the Albanian prime minister’s villa near Vlora.
According to the Albanian broadcaster Vizion Plus, it was Rama who invited the prime minister for a special visit to the country. A visit to ‘Vlora’, 32, who was on his way to ‘Italy’ in 1991, as the Albanian beaches recorded a boom in the presence of Italian tourists, compared Italians vacationing in Albania with Albanians in 2023 in a recent Facebook post by the head of the Tirana government. The photo of the ship was docking in the port of Bari with 20,000 people on 8 August. An invasion of half a million from your country, we will not be the new Riviera. I love Meloni, if you were smart you would invest more here,” he said in an interview.
The socialist prime minister described Meloni as “a tiger” in an interview with ‘Libero’ on 12 August: “On the international stage, Giorgia surprised everyone and I can say this in a big way because they were waiting for a fascist beast to march on Europe and themselves great. They found themselves in front of a woman with a terrible talent for communicating like a European without mistakes”.
Source: Today IT
Emma Fitzgerald is an accomplished political journalist and author at The Nation View. With a background in political science and international relations, she has a deep understanding of the political landscape and the forces that shape it.