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Albanian MP killed

ca/ch, AP/AFP/ReutersMay 3, 2009

An unidentified gunman has shot dead the deputy of Albania's Socialist Party, less than two months before parliamentary elections and just days after the country submitted its candidacy for the European Union.

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The flags of Albania and the European Union
Albania formally applied to join the EU last TuesdayImage: DW/Aida Cama

Albanian authorities say Fatmir Xhindi was shot dead late on Saturday evening in Roskovec, about 100 kilometers southwest of the capital Tirana.

Police say six bullets from a Kalashnikov automatic rifle hit Xhindi as he was parking his car at his home. He died on his way to hospital.

Xhindi's Socialist Party said it is shocked by the murder. Senior Socialist Gramoz Ruci said he was not excluding the possibility that the killing was politically motivated.

The attack comes less than two months before Albania is due to hold parliamentary elections.

Albania also became the latest country to apply for membership of the European Union last Tuesday, after joining NATO several weeks ago.

A long way to go

A woman carries a large load of branches on her back
Albania remains one of Europe's poorest countriesImage: Mimoza Dhima

The European Commission had urged Albania to put off its application to the EU until after the country's general elections on June 28.

All elections held in Albania since the demise of communism in the early 1990s have been disputed and marred by incidents. The European Commission has said that elections in post-communist Albania have never been certified as free or fair by international observers.

In a report released by the Commission late last year, it said more progress was needed in Albania on fighting organised crime and corruption, and that the state administration and the courts needed to be strengthened.

Albania has been trying -- parliament adopted a new electoral law last November aimed at preventing fraud -- but there is a long way to go.

Prime Minister Sali Berisha said that the country's formal application to the EU was of "historic significance" and marked Albania's return to the "family of European nations."

"Albania has proved today that it is a functioning democracy," he said on Tuesday.

Berisha also said that 96 percent of Albanians wanted to join the EU.

Michael Leigh, the European Commission's director general for enlargement, said that holding free and fair parliamentary elections in June remained a key condition.

"It is now up to Albania to demonstrate its capacity to move to the next stage of European integration," Leigh said.