Serbian media: Rama urges Greece to return Chamari to Albanians

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama urged Athens to return property to Albanians, known as Chamberria. According to the Serbian medium “Vestinat” now Albanians want to take part of Greece, and this is Epiri, the coastal part of Corfu. Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama is calling from Athens to repatriate Greek property and citizenship for Albanian Muslims, to [...]
According to the Serbian medium “Vestinat” now Albanians want to take part of Greece, and this is Epiri, the coastal part of Corfu. Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama is asking Athens to restore Greek property and citizenship for Albanian Muslims, the so-called fountains who were expelled after World War II from Epirus in co-operation with the Nazis.
Speaking to Albanian television, Rama said Greece should recognise the prices.
“The problem of the camera is open. We hope that we will successfully conclude talks on this and enter a new era of strategic co-operation with our neighbours, an era in which future problems will not be repeated, in which shadows of the past will remain in the past,” said the Albanian prime minister.
He added that Albania also asked Greece to set up a monument to Mothers in Epirus, as large as the mosque built by the Greek government in Athens for Muslims, Periscopi broadcasts.
Albania's “Pala insists on the talks on issues. That's an Albanian question. We talk about citizens who once owned Greece and bore bitter memories. We are asking them to set up a monument in Epirus, and that is a fully justified request,” said Rama.
Analysts, however, believe the authorities' new request in Tirana is only an introduction to the capture of Greek territory.
It is no secret that Albanians have not given up on “Greater Albania”.
After Kosovo and losing power in Macedonia, they are halfway up the finish line. They only worship the North-Western part of Greece and part of Montenegro. They have now fled to Greece, and if they receive international support, they will get Chamer in Epirus. Then we will have a major problem in the Balkans, deemed by Greek experts. There are, of course, Albanians of Muslim faiths who were expelled from Greece in 1944 and 1945 because of their co-operation with the Nazi occupation.
The exact number of deported is not known precisely, and according to Greek sources, there are between 14,000 and 25,000 people, while Albanians claim there are 35,000.
Tirana urges Greeks to return property to them, grant them Greek citizenship, but also to recognise them as a national minority.
Albanians started this issue in the early 1990s, but nothing has happened since the international community's support. Greece, on the other hand, does not recognise the issue of flats in general. Athens has no intention of allowing secessions to return to Greece because they have worked with the German-Italian occupational forces during World War II. /Periscopi/











