Albania's police chief has been suspended from his post while being
investigated for the illegal use of wiretapping equipment, the
prosecutor general's office said Tuesday.
The office said in a statement that Haki Cako is suspected of abuse of
power, and the court has put two other senior officials under house
arrest until the investigation is over.
Prosecutors started the probe after learning that police had been using
wiretapping equipment that had entered the country "without proper
authorization." They are also checking whether other senior officials
are involved.
When Cako and Interior Minister Saimir Tahiri were asked by opposition
lawmakers about the case, both said the equipment had been brought in by
Italian police for training officers, not for wiretapping, and defended
the three officials.
"The police director and the two other employees have not broken the law
in any second of their work. They have done no wiretapping and nothing
linked in any way to wiretapping," Tahiri said Tuesday.
Lulzim Basha, leader of the main opposition Democratic Party, called on
Prime Minister Edi Rama of the governing Socialist Party to dismiss
Tahiri so justice officials can investigate him.
In a public apology to the Italian government, Rama called the
prosecutors' move a "random political conspiracy" and an "absurd
investigation."
Local Albania media reported that Italy had called back the head of its
law enforcement mission who had been assisting Albanian police. The
embassy's press office declined to confirm that.
Prosecutor General Adriatik Llalla has told the Italian ambassador in
Tirana that the Italian mission is not under investigation.
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