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HISTORY
> COLLAPSE
OF COMMUNISM
After Hoxha's death in 1985, his handpicked successor,
Ramiz Alia, sought to preserve the communist system
while introducing gradual reforms in order to
revive the economy, which had been declining steadily
since the cessation of aid from former communist
allies. To this end he legalized some investment
in Albania by foreign firms and expanded diplomatic
relations with the West. But, with the fall of
communism in eastern Europe in 1989, various segments
of Albanian society became politically active
and began to agitate against the government. The
most alienated groups were the intellectuals and
the working class--traditionally the vanguards
of a communist movement or organization--as well
as Albania's youth, which had been frustrated
by years of confinement and restrictions. In response
to these pressures, Alia granted Albanian citizens
the right to travel abroad, curtailed the powers
of the Sigurimi, restored religious freedom, and
adopted some free-market measures for the economy.
In December 1990 Alia endorsed the creation of
independent political parties, thus signaling
an end to the communists' official monopoly of
power. With each concession to the opposition,
the state's absolute control over Albanian society
weakened. Continuing economic, social, and political
instability led to the fall of several governments,
and in March 1992 a decisive electoral victory
was won by the anticommunist opposition led by
the Democratic Party. Alia resigned as president
and was succeeded by Sali Berisha, the first democratic
leader of Albania since Bishop Noli. Albania's
progress toward democratic reform enabled it to
gain membership in the Conference on Security
and Cooperation in Europe, formally bringing to
an end its notorious isolation. Efforts to establish
a free-market economy caused severe dislocations,
but they also opened the road for Albania to obtain
vast amounts of aid from developed countries.
Albania was thus well on its way toward integrating
its politics and institutions with the West, which
Albanians have historically viewed as their cultural
and geographic home.
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