Skip to main content

The Smiles that Clean the System

Sometimes I wonder where all the money goes. Regularly, the EU, the US, the World Bank and other worthies announce multi-million Euro/Dollar loans, grants or investments in Albania. Much of this is directed to worthy causes - reforming infrastructure, reforming the police and criminal justice system, relieving poverty and the like. And slowly - very slowly in some cases - it does make a difference.

Still, you can't spend all your time building roads and tackling organised crime. Which was why I was delighted to come across a story from a few month's ago on the website of the British Embassy. It seems the good old Brits are helping Albanians develop their satirical skills. Four local journalists attended a seminar on satire in Zagreb last November. The Embassy press release explains the thinking behind the seminar:
One of British journalism's greatest traditional weapons in the battle against corruption and malpractice through five centuries has been the ability to laugh in the face of authority. From Thomas Nash to Defoe to Swift to Hazlitt to Bernard Levin (and even Richard Littlejohn), satire has been a prime tool in the journalist's armoury. What's officious and bullying can also be ridiculous. There is a whole British tradition built on this belief.

Journalists in other countries, of course, often use satire themselves in their struggles with authority. But the techniques and approaches can vary widely. The aim of the seminar in Zagreb - using British columnists, cartoonists and broadcasters of the highest reputation - was to share experiences, to identify new possibilities, and to help the laughter go and little wider, and deeper.
As I read this I couldn't help thinking of The Piranha Brothers. Luigi Vercotti described the brothers:
I had been running a successful escort agency - high class, no really, high class girls - we didn't have any of 'that' - that was right out. So I decided to open a high class night club for the gentry at Biggleswade with International cuisine and cooking and top line acts, and not a cheap clip joint for picking up tarts - that was right out, I deny that completely - and one evening in walks Dinsdale with a couple of big lads, one of whom was carrying a tactical nuclear missile.

They said I had bought one of their fruit machines and would I pay for it? They wanted three quarters of a million pounds. I thought about it and decided not to go to the Police as I had noticed that the lad with the thermonuclear device was the chief constable for the area. So a week later they called again and told me the cheque had bounced and said... I had to see... Doug.

Well, I was terrified. Everyone was terrified of Doug. I've seen grown men pull their own heads off rather than see Doug. Even Dinsdale was frightened of Doug. He used... sarcasm. He knew all the tricks, dramatic irony, metaphor, bathos, puns, parody, litotes and... satire. He was vicious.
For those of you who are completely lost at this point, The Piranha Brothers was a Monty Python sketch. You can see the whole of the sketch in two parts on YouTube. Start with part 1 for the whole sketch, move on to part 2 for Luigi's contribution.

Personally I think this is a great idea and as a British citizen and taxpayer I would like the FCO and the British Embassy to know that I fully approve this way of spending my money.

Comments

ITS said…
Alwyn,

You said: "Sometimes I wonder where all the money goes. Regularly, the EU, the US, the World Bank and other worthies announce multi-million Euro/Dollar loans, grants or investments in Albania."

Well, I have "figured this out" long time ago, and even blogged the simplified version of "the foreign aid myth".

http://www.digitalobjective.com/2005/11/myth-of-foreign-aid.html

But in a few words all foreign aid from western powers finds it way back to the western powers. Very little of it stays in Albania...

Cheers,
~its
Anonymous said…
'It seems the good old Brits are helping Albanians develop their satirical skills.'


hahahahahahahaha
hahahahahaha
hahaha ha ha ha ha hhhhhhhhhhh

oh u shkriva se qeshuri.....
Anonymous said…
We can't be that naive and believe that these money goes everywhere but the destination. Yes, is true there have been a lot of cases which are questionable, but still there is a follow up procedure after the money gets delievered for a specific contract.

In regard of what the anonymous says about the Brits, it's not true. Probably it relates more to the Old GB policys, which taught on how to become an "OLD MADAM" an milk money out of "WHORES" on that part of the ruled over world. And, somehow, succeded.
Anonymous said…
anonynomous says: In regard of what the anonymous says about the Brits, it's not true.

it was theirman in tirana who said smth about the brits. he is not anonimous.

Popular posts from this blog

Dy Rame Per Tirane

I was watching Top Channel last night, first the news, then Fiks Fare. According to them Tirana's citizens now have a choice not only between Rama and Olldashi, but also between Rama and Rama. A minor right-wing faction, Parti 'Balli Kombetar' , submitted papers to the election authorities registering their candidate, Akile Rama. The people on Fiks Fare got hold of the papers and sent a reporter and camera team to the address listed for Mr A Rama. After much ringing of the bell the gate was reluctantly opened by a middle-aged woman who refused to speak to the reporter and tried to close the gate on her. Back in the studio Saimiri and Doctori - the two presenters of Fiks Fare - revealed that Mr Akile Rama was 73 years old, in hospital, and did not know he was now a candidate for mayor. They also compared two documents - the papers submitted on his behalf, and a genuine document he had signed. The signatures were not even remotely similar. There was an interview with the lea

Albania and the Perils of the 21st Century

Another article on religion in Albania appeared yesterday. Patrick Poole, writing in the American Thinker , argues that Saudi funding for the construction of mosques and the training of imams is a threat to Albania, since these mosques and imams reflect the fundamentalist interpretation of Islam dominant in Saudi Arabia.

Only Way is Up

Chatting with a taxi driver while back in Belfast a few months ago, he was intrigued when I told him that I was living in Albania. Did I think it was worth investing in property there, he enquired. Not unless you're prepared to risk losing your money, I replied. By the end of the journey he was considering Bulgaria instead. Despite the risks, some people are starting to invest in Albanian property. The Daily Telegraph reports on Ian Warburton who recently spent 29,000 GBP (around 40,000 EUR) on a one-bedroom apartment in a new development in Tirana. "Given its location, I don't see how it can fail to work," he said. The development is called Terra Nova and the apartments are being actively marketed as an investment opportunity by Barrasford and Bird , a UK property company. Here is their sales pitch for Albania: Albania shares the same stunning coastline as Croatia and Montenegro. However, Albania has better weather and prices are about a quarter of those compa