Rilindja Demokratike Democratic Rebirth | |
Type: | Daily Newspaper |
Format: | Berliner |
Owners: | Democratic Party of Albania |
Chiefeditor: | Bledi Kasmi |
Foundation: | [1] |
Political: | Part of Democratic Party of Albania |
Language: | Albanian |
Headquarters: | Tirana |
Circulation: | Present: 3.000 (2014) Record: 125.000 (1991) |
Rilindja Demokratike (en|Democratic Rebirth and short RD) is an Albanian newspaper founded and continuously published in Tirana. Rilindja Demokratike is the official newspaper of the Democratic Party of Albania.[2] Its chief editor is Bledi Kasmi. Its first publication was on 5 January 1991 and was the first free newspaper since the Fall of communism in Albania, while it functioned against the state newspaper Zëri i Popullit what was the newspaper of the Communist Party and nowadays of the Socialist Party.[3] RD was also the first media in Albania that openly criticized the regime of Enver Hoxha[4]
RD still holds the record of most published newspaper in Albania, with a circulation of 125.000 copies in 1991.[5] Together with Gazeta 55 it is the only right winged news paper, but RD is considered the main opposition newspaper.[6]
Huge political reforms took place in Albania, and the Communist regime in power was forced to allow small opposition groups in its political system. After the fall of communism in Albania the Democratic Party (DP) on 11 December 1990 no free media was published in Albania. On 5 January 1991 the first issue of RD was published in Albania,[7] ordered by Sali Berisha, at that leader of the DP. RD started to function against the state newspaper Zëri i Popullit what was the newspaper of the Communist Party and nowadays of the Socialist Party.
In the beginning, RD was published twice a week, but was later converted to a daily newspaper. The circulation of the paper was in the beginning around 70-100 thousand copies, while people interested in the newspaper had to wait in lines to get a copy. Its 2005 circulation was 10,000 copies, making it the third most read daily in the country.[8] In the first numbers RD oriented to the values of freedom, democracy, free market and anti-self-understanding. There were left pages to former politically persecuted and former owners, who by this action got for the first time in history a voice in the country.
The first words of the newspaper were "today, Rilindja Demokratike [Democratic Reborn] says its first words. This reborn has a big task and one of great importance. It has taken the duty to say the right things." Its first issue was sold by the price of 1 Leke.
The newspaper is organized in seven sections, including the magazine Ekspres.al.
When referring to people, Rilindja Demokratike generally uses honorifics, rather than unadorned last names (except in the sports pages, Book Review and Magazine). In the early years it used a four-column format, but switched to five-column format.
One of the main elements of RD are the opinion pieces published daily. Usually, two opinion pages are published. Although the authors of the opinion pieces are not scheduled, some of its main contributors are Bledi Kasmi,[9] Basir Çollaku,[10] Hamit Taka,[11] [12] and Hyqmet Zane[13] [14] for RD. It is interesting to notice that RD have been over the time a starting point for many politicians of the Democratic Party, like Astrid Patozi, Edi Paloka and Gent Strazimiri.
Rilindja Demokratike has had a web presence since 2005. Accessing articles does not require registration. Only the front page can be downloaded in pdf-format, the papers articles can be accessed only on the website. Since 2013, RD has a new website.
The first editor was Frrok Çupi, who was fired in June 1991 after disagreeing with party head Sali Berisha.[15] Çupi later blamed people who had "adopted Enver’s tactics very well.”[16] After he left, Napoleon Roshi took the lead of RD. He was a former director of Foreign Radio and former journalist at "Union", then Mitro Çela, will lead the newspaper till the end of 1991 until the successful campaign of 22 March 1992.
In April 1992, Bashkim Trenova was the editor in chief until the end of 1994, which was took by Lorenc Ligori, spokesman for the Democratic Party in that time. In the autumn of 1995 RD will be administered by Lazer Stani until March 12, 1997, after which will be overtaken by Xhevat Mustafa, who will remain in office until May 1997, when he was replaced by Astrit Patozi, former editor of Albania. Patozi ran the newspaper until July 2005, when he would be elected a member of the Democratic Party in the Parliament. From this time onwards newspaper RD was directed by journalist Bledi Kasmi.[17]