The SELDI coalition, which monitors corruption and governance in Southeast Europe, points out in its latest report that anti-corruption reforms in Western Balkan countries have not achieved any substantial improvement.
According to the report published today in Tirana, Albania has the highest rates of bribery, the highest pressure of officials to accept bribes and the highest victimization of citizens from corruption.
In the latest report of the SELDI coalition on corruption in the countries of the Western Balkans, it is also stated that there is a stagnation (stagnation) in anti-corruption reforms.
Albania holds the first place in the region for the highest bribery rates (40 percent), followed by North Macedonia, Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and finally Kosovo and Montenegro with the lowest bribery rates (10 percent).
In Albania, according to the report, there is the greatest pressure from officials on citizens to give bribes (52 percent), followed by North Macedonia (31 percent), Serbia (26 percent), Bosnia and Herzegovina (24 percent) and finally Montenegro (11 percent) and Kosovo (7 percent).
In 2023/2024, Albania is the most affected by the victimization of corruption; 80% of its population is inclined to accept or offer bribes, while the citizens of Montenegro are less vulnerable, where only 48% are susceptible to corruption, the report states.
The optimism of the citizens of Albania towards anti-corruption policies has decreased to 20 percent (-6 percent less than the previous measurement), while in almost all other countries there has been an increase in the belief that corruption will decrease.
The expert of the Center for the Study of Democracy, Daniela Mineva, member of the coalition with 17 organizations from 14 countries of South-Eastern Europe, tells VOA that new institutions are established and new laws are adopted, but they are not implemented in practice.
She added that the EU’s IPA project foresees 619 million euros for improvements to the rule of law in this region, but there is still no punishment for high-level officials involved in corruption.
“The survey carried out in the countries of the Western Balkans shows that currently involvement in corruption varies between 10% in Montenegro and Albania with 40%. In Albania, 80 percent of people claimed that they would give or accept a bribe if they needed to do so. This is very disturbing and knocks people’s optimism that the government can do something about the anti-corruption promises. We advise to accept the capture of the state in public bodies and that international partners and civil society work to ensure checks and balances of power”, said Mrs. Mineva.
In the assessment of the level of corruption in the countries of the Western Balkans by the SELDI Corruption Monitoring System, it turned out that anti-corruption policies in the region do not tend to produce a lasting effect, while public institutions and political parties are joining state capture networks that hijack government decision-making.
Despite the reforms undertaken for integration in the EU, citizens still consider corruption as one of the main problems of the Western Balkans, which includes the non-separation of powers, the lack of justice results, political interventions and the weak integrity of the public sector, the report states.
The SELDI coalition and the Center for Economic Research ACER organized today a regional forum on anti-corruption and state capture.
The head of the EU Delegation in Albania, Ambassador Silvio Gonzato, said that measures against corruption should be visible in terms of prevention, prosecution and punishment, because corruption brings crime and inequality, damages the business climate, and drives away from the country young people who have lost faith that the authorities will succeed in this phenomenon.


