Environmentalists warn Vlora airport will irreparably damage a key Mediterranean wetland. Questions are also being raised about the politically connected consortium behind the lucrative airport deal.
Key Findings
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Albania has given the go-ahead to build a new airport in a key Mediterranean wetland, a decision the European Commission and experts say violates international conventions and national law.
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The consortium chosen to build the airport includes a Turkish conglomerate with ties to the party of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who personally ordered the company to build a hospital near the airport’s site just before the winners were announced.
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The consortium is led by a company owned by controversial Kosovar businessman and politician Behgjet Pacolli, a personal friend of Albania’s prime minister who allegedly has connections to organized crime figures.
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A rival bidder alleges the government changed the bidding criteria to favor the winning consortium at the last minute, and accuses the Public Procurement Agency of illegal decision-making and fabricating documents.
The Other Turkish Consortium
The YDA-Mabtex-2A consortium is not the first Turkish-backed group chosen to construct Vlora International Airport.
Albania’s government first launched a tender to build the airport in 2017. That February, Rama posted that he had held a working lunch with Turkish President Erdoğan to discuss the “Vlora Airport project, a totally Albanian airline, and other strategic investments.” A year later, Rama said the government had received a proposal from a consortium of three of Turkey’s largest companies: Cengiz Holding, Kalyon Holding, and Kolin Construction. They are part of a group of conglomerates that Turkey’s opposition has dubbed the “five crooks,” accusing them of receiving favors from Erdoğan’s government. These companies are run by a group of businessmen who have gained wealth and power following the rise of Erdoğan’s AKP Party in the early 2000s. Their selection to build Istanbul’s new airport shows how the president has used state contracts to create powerful patronage networks among Turkish businesses, U.S.-based Turkey specialist A. Kadir Yildirim wrote in the Washington Post. Albania’s government drafted a law in 2018 to accelerate negotiations and agreed to give the consortium a 60-year operating contract. The move raised red flags in Brussels, with the then-European Union commissioner for enlargement Johannes Hahn saying the Commission would investigate. In late 2019, Albania dropped the deal with the Turkish consortium. It gave no explanation as to why. Not long after, the government launched a new tender to build Vlora International Airport. After months of trying to get hold of the tender documents through freedom of information requests, OCCRP applied to get them through court. At the end of 2021, a judge ruled the Ministry of Infrastructure and Energy should hand over the documents, but it still refuses to do so.
A Lonely Fight
On a hot day in late July, biology professor Niko Dumani stood sweating in a makeshift tent in the Narta forest, in southwestern Albania. Dumani had come to explain to the locals why conservationists are opposing Vlora International Airport, but as soon as he stood up the crowd started shouting insults at him. “What do you want here? We live here and it’s our choice,” barked the chairman of the district. “You want us to take care of sparrows? Get out of Vlora!” Speaking to OCCRP after he was forced out of the meeting, Dumani said that while the airport and the tourist resorts planned for nearby are “in flagrant violation of the law,” he expects they will be built anyway. The airport will sit a few kilometers from the Vjosa-Narta lagoon, part of a coastal delta at the mouth of one of the last wild rivers in Europe. The wetlands are home to some 200 species of bird, including flamingos and the endangered Dalmatian pelican, and form part of a key migration corridor for many more on their annual journey from Central Europe to North Africa. The lagoon, already protected by several international conventions, has been nominated to join the Council of Europe’s Emerald Network of special conservation sites. The European Commission said Tirana’s approval of Vlora International Airport violated both national laws and international conventions. The development “is in contradiction with existing national laws for protected areas and with international conventions on biodiversity protection that Albania has ratified,” the European Union’s delegation to Albania said in a statement. Environmentalists say the airport will have a “devastating” impact on local biodiversity, with the loss of habitat, along with air, water, and noise pollution, causing irreversible harm to the many birds that live there. The airport’s close proximity to the lagoon means planes are more likely to collide with birds as they land and take off, particularly during the busy migration seasons. Despite this, OCCRP’s reporting found that Albania’s government has almost literally moved mountains to ensure the airport will be built. When Rama first proposed building Vlora airport, after talks with Erdoğan, Albania’s government started discussing making changes to the country’s nature reserves. A few months after the winners of the tender to build it were announced, a council chaired by Rama approved redrawing the borders of more than a quarter of the country’s coastal ecosystems – including the area near the Vjosa-Narta lagoon where the airport will be built. Lawyer Irena Dule said the changes to the protected areas were illegal. “The start of the construction of this airport is contested based on the law,” she said, adding that the start of the work had been announced without the proper building and environmental permits. Others have taken issue with the environmental impact assessment for the airport, which was commissioned by companies that own land in the area, including consortium members YDA Group and Mabetex Group. The academic who carried out the study raised few concerns about the airport’s impact, and said any problems could be solved with simple mitigation methods. Twenty environmental groups denounced the study as “unprofessional, unscientific,” and a “clearly clientelistic analysis.” Albania’s tourism ministry told OCCRP the boundaries of the nature reserve had been changed as part of a national review of protected areas “to reflect observed inaccuracies and propose new areas, based on data and recent studies,” and because of a new legal framework set out by the government. In a statement, the ministry said it plans to study the airport’s impact using an environmental management plan, including scientific monitoring and habitat preservation funded by the consortium. It also recommended other measures, such as banning work near sensitive areas during the breeding season and rerouting flights during periods of migration. Lluka said the consortium had carried out a “thorough” study on what environmental and social harm the airport could cause, and concluded it would have no negative effects. “We are extremely happy to confirm that the results of the study bring to light, without any doubt, that the construction and operation of Vlora International Airport will not present any environmental degradation or other harmful impact,” he said.Friends with Benefits
On January 11, 2021, YDA Group’s chairman, Hüseyin Arslan, touched down in Albania. Though largely unknown in the country, he quickly made headlines when he announced that his company would build a hospital not far from Vlora. “We … were ordered by our president, Mr Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, last week during the visit of [Albania’s] honorable prime minister to Turkey,” Arslan said in a video posted on Rama’s Facebook page. “We were instructed that we have to finalize, deliver the hospital in three months. There is a big bet on this.” Building work kicked off soon after, with Rama publishing regular updates on the hospital’s progress on his Facebook page. Throughout, his office described the hospital as “charity” from Erdoğan’s government, with no hint that YDA Group is one of the largest conglomerates in Turkey. At home, YDA Group is well known for its relationship with Erdoğan’s government. Arslan has longstanding ties to the AKP Party through his sister, who is married to the uncle of the man who co-founded the party with Erdoğan in 2001. Arslan publicly praised Erdoğan after an attempted coup in 2016, describing him and Turkey’s then-prime minister as caretakers of “our democracy, our future, and our national will.” Erdoğan, in turn, awarded Arslan a plaque of appreciation two years later. It was not until after the new hospital had been inaugurated, with Erdoğan in virtual attendance, that Rama announced the consortium led by Paccoli, which included YDA, had won the tender to build Vlora International Airport. YDA Group and Erdoğan’s office did not respond to requests for comment.Mabetex Group’s owner, Pacolli, was a more familiar face in Albania than Arslan. The construction magnate is one of the wealthiest people in neighboring Kosovo, with a fortune of close to 800 million euros. Over the years he has been Kosovo’s deputy prime minister, foreign minister, and even –– for four hours –– its president. Mabetex became embroiled in a major corruption scandal in the late 1990s over accusations that company executives had paid bribes to win a contract to work on the Kremlin. A Russian probe was later dropped after the lead investigator was fired over a bizarre sex-tape scandal. A related investigation for money laundering and bribery was also dismissed in Switzerland, where Pacolli is now a citizen. Pacolli is known to have ties to alleged organized crime figures, including Milan Radoičić, a powerful figure in Kosovo’s largest Serbian party, and Jose Enrique Rais, an accused fraudster and cocaine trafficker from El Salvador. Rais holds the dubious accolade of being on his country’s “most wanted” list, being a “priority target” of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, and was at one point reportedly on Interpol’s red list. His company, Rais Group International NC, LLC, is cited in U.S. court files as “subject to international investigation for its links to organized crime groups, ghost companies, cartels and corrupt politicians.” Corporate records show Pacolli was a manager of Rais Group as of late 2011, while the company was being investigated. Pacolli denied any involvement in corruption, pointing out that he had “never been the subject of any kind of indictment or trial” in either Russia or Switzerland. Pacolli admitted that he knew Rais, but denied he had been a manager of Rais Group. “I know Jose Enrique Rais as a businessman who has operated in the world of aviation and as a Swiss citizen,” he said. “I rented a plane from the company he owned for a few months, but I had no knowledge that he was a drug trafficker.” Despite Pacolli’s murky associations, Rama counts him as a close friend. The prime minister has spoken publicly of his “love and respect” for Pacolli, whom he refers to as “Baca” Behgjet, an affectionate term often used for older male family members in northern Albania. A year after a major earthquake hit Albania in November 2019, killing 51 people and causing widespread destruction, the Behgjet Pacolli Foundation signed an agreement to rebuild an entire neighborhood in the city of Fushë-Krujë for an estimated 1 million euros. A few months later, in January 2021, the government opened the tender for Vlora International Airport. Pacolli said when he made the donation he had no knowledge that the tender would take place so soon, or his company would bid for the contract. The winning consortium’s representative, Lluka, is also an associate of Pacolli. Kosovo’s Serious Crimes Prosecution Section has investigated him twice, for abuse of office and fraud, both related to his role as an executive of the Economic Bank in Pristina, which is managed by the Pacolli family. The first case, for abuse of an official position, was dropped in 2019 after a judge ruled it had exceeded the statute of limitations. Lluka was acquitted in the second case last year due to lack of evidence. Lluka said he had never been found guilty of any crime. “In my life I have never been convicted by any court. I do not even have sentences for violating traffic rules, not to mention any other criminal offense,” he said in a statement sent to OCCRP.The Home of Air Albania
The idea to create Air Albania first took off in February 2017, around the time Rama first proposed Vlora airport. A few months later, Rama announced that he had held talks with the then-chairman of Turkey’s national carrier, Turkish Airlines, Mehmet İlker Ayci."We discussed with Mr. Ayci the project … to establish a new Albanian airline, which has started to be designed thanks to the special support of President Erdoğan and the technical assistance of the Turkish Airlines team," Rama announced after the meeting. More than a year after Rama’s first announcement, and after several more meetings with Ayci, Albania’s government established Air Albania. The new airline is owned by Turkish Airlines, Albanian government-owned aviation entity Albcontrol Sha, and MDN Investiment Shpk, a private company set up just nine days before the government announcement. MDN was created by Sinan Idrizi, an Albanian businessman who worked in Turkey for many years before returning in 2014, becoming co-owner of the Flamurtari Football Club in Rama’s constituency. Idrizi, who claims to have “known Erdoğan for 25 years,” told OCCRP he created MDN at the request of Albania’s government on behalf of troubled Turkish airline Atlas Global, which went bankrupt in 2020. But within weeks of Air Albania’s birth, Ibrizi started offloading his stake to his wife and daughter. Idrizi said he decided to transfer his shares to them after receiving criticism in the Albanian press. “They started saying that I am not an Albanian citizen, they came and asked me how many passports I have,” he said, describing the transfer to his wife and daughter as “an agreement within the family.” Rama’s office did not respond to requests for comment.