The recently disclosed documents raise strong doubts about a genuine scheme of embezzlement of public funds, where businessman Eral Myftaraj is suspected of having extorted nearly 40 million euros through tenders with forged documents. According to sources from behind the scenes of politics, this dark corrupt line connects him directly to the former Minister of the Interior, Bledi Çuçi, positioning Myftaraj in the narrow circles as his personal “pocket”. Shocking facts and evidence have been filed for SPAK, to reveal how a single network allegedly emptied the state coffers with clean hands and dirty papers.
From “victim” to tender monster: the anatomy of a 40 million dollar scheme
A year ago, the name of Eral Myftaraj occupied the black chronicles after he appeared as the “courageous” businessman from Gramshi, threatened with a gun to the head by the Cërrik gangs to withdraw from a forest tender in Tirana. But behind this media facade of victims resisting crime, there seems to have been a silent architect of the depletion of public funds. The latest documents that are being gathered for the desks of the Special Prosecutor’s Office raise dark shadows of suspicion: Myftaraj is not just a hapless entrepreneur, but an essential cog in a machine that was absorbing state money through brutal forgeries.
The figure in question is scary: 40 million euros. These are not citizens’ savings; it is the lifeblood of the state budget. There is talk of a completely rigged core of operations, where tenders were not won with the best offer or real expertise, but were allegedly sealed with false papers, fabricated balance sheets and illusory contracts. Such an alleged scheme, left free to swallow millions for years, clearly proves that the so-called “businessman” was not operating alone, but with signatures signed above.
The shadow of Bledi Çuçi: How the state budget is used as a personal ATM
When millions of euros are made into grapes and plums through “crowded” procurements, the threads do not remain with peripheral names. Researching deep into the multitude of invoices signed by Myftaraj’s companies inevitably leads to the next dome of power. According to the denunciations and rumors that are circulating more and more strongly, Myftaraj functions as a secret instrument—or deep “pocket”—of the former Minister of the Interior, Bledi Çuçi.
Can an individual, who was put a pistol to the head for some wooden boards, alienate and suddenly receive tens of millions of euros in tenders without having an absolute and impenetrable political umbrella? The shadow of the former minister who had the duty to protect the law, is suspected to have served to open the doors of the state budget to this group. Their rumored relationship raises screaming questions about how the budget turns into a personal savings box, where the rulers point and the “pockets” pick up the sack, covering every financial carnage with the “regular” stamp of the institutions.
The file for SPAK and the “loop” of forgeries
The facts are stubborn. When we x-ray the data, another dimension of greed comes to light where money is transferred from the treasury to the companies. Abuse methods erect walls of evidence that exceed the bounds of reasonable doubt.
These surgical moves of devouring the budget are alarm bells for the Special Prosecutor’s Office (SPAK). Any false document is an open invitation to handcuffs. This is not another dust folder; this is a vital test for justice, to show whether the rulers of the rank of Bledi Çuçi will remain untouchable when their subordinates are caught with 40 million euros allegedly hidden under the state carpet.
We live in a magical republic, where if you don’t pay your electricity bill for two months, the police come and cut your soul wire with pliers. But, if you falsify a mountain of documents to enter 40 million euros of public funds into your account, and if you happen to be the “walking portfolio” of a former minister, the state treats you as a strategic investor. At the end of the day, Bled and Eral are probably not stealing at all; they are simply teaching the Albanians the abstract art of how taxes evaporate without leaving a single bill behind! / Monument.com
















