Democracy Does Not Stop at the Border

If
citizens are prevented from exercising their right to move freely or to
participate in democratic life because of their political beliefs, then it is
not only the Constitution and freedom of movement that are being violated, but
also the very foundation of the rule of law, democracy, and the international
commitments Albania has undertaken to protect fundamental freedoms.
There
are days when history is not written in the offices of misgovernance, but in
the streets taken by citizens. There are moments when democracy is not measured
by the declarations of those in power, but by how misgovernance treats ordinary
people. It is precisely there that it becomes clear whether institutions serve
the citizen or are placed in the service of political interest.
Freedom
of movement is not a favor granted by misgovernance. It is not a privilege
distributed according to the mood of those in power, nor a right that can be
restricted whenever misgovernance feels threatened. It is a fundamental right,
guaranteed by the Constitution of the Republic of Albania, protected by the
European Convention on Human Rights, and by international instruments that
democratic states have accepted as a minimum standard of freedom. These are not
symbolic documents, but legal boundaries that draw the line between democracy
and arbitrariness.
In
any democratic system, the border exists to ensure security and order, not to
become an instrument of political filtering. It cannot be used by misgovernance
to create divisions among citizens or to impose barriers based on beliefs,
attitudes, or participation in public life.
Albania
and Kosovo are not merely two neighboring states. They are two parts of a
shared historical body, connected by language, culture, and common sacrifices.
For decades, the discourse has been about bringing people closer and removing
barriers. Therefore, any situation that creates the impression of obstructing
free movement among Albanians requires full transparency and institutional
accountability from misgovernance.
A
democracy is not afraid of its citizens. It is misgovernance that is afraid,
because free citizens are its moral and political boundary. Those who move,
speak, protest, and demand accountability are the clearest proof of a society's
democratic health. When misgovernance begins to see this freedom as a threat,
it is not defending order—it is revealing its own weakness.
The
principles of proportionality and equality before the law are the foundation of
any democratic system. Any restriction of rights must be necessary, justified,
and grounded in the public interest. Any deviation from these principles, when
coming from misgovernance, undermines public trust and weakens institutional
legitimacy.
If
delays or increased controls are the result of normal procedures, high traffic,
or technical reasons, misgovernance has the duty to clarify this promptly and
with full transparency. Silence, ambiguity, or lack of public communication
fuels suspicion and deepens the divide between citizens and institutions.
Democracy
is not undermined only through major political decisions. It is gradually
eroded when citizens begin to feel that their freedoms depend on their
political stance. This is the moment when misgovernance replaces law with
perception and rights with political discretion.
Democracy
is not the rule of the majority, but the limitation of power in the face of
individual rights. The Constitution and institutions exist to set boundaries on
misgovernance, not to serve it. They are the citizen's shield, not the
instrument of power.
Therefore,
any situation affecting fundamental freedoms must be handled with maximum
seriousness, transparency, and institutional responsibility. Trust is not built
through control, but through respect for the law. And democracy is not measured
by the strength of misgovernance, but by the freedom of its citizens.
Because
democracy does not begin in the offices of misgovernance and does not end at
borders. It lives in the freedom of citizens to move, to speak, and to live
without fear of the power that is meant to serve them.
The Land of Leka,
04.07.2026



