Albania Created an ‘A.I. Minister’ to Curb Corruption. Then Its Developers Were Accused of Graft

The Albanian avatar known as Diella, a public anticorruption crusader, has been described as the world’s first government minister created by artificial intelligence.

Three screens display the same digital avatar in a white head covering. Other monitors show computer programming and a video conference.
Staff at Albania’s National Information Agency watching Diella, the first government minister created by artificial intelligence. Credit…Vlasov Sulaj/Associated Press

The avatar known as Diella, billed as the world’s first government minister to be generated by artificial intelligence, was supposed to help cut Albania’s endemic corruption.

But there’s a glitch. The leaders of the agency that built it stand accused of bid-rigging public contracts.

Wearing traditional garb and an enigmatic smile, Diella has become the face of Prime Minister Edi Rama’s efforts to rein in graft as Albania seeks to join the European Union. Over the past year, Diella (pronounced dee-EL-ah) has spoken at international conferences and been showered with publicity as a symbol of how A.I. is being embedded in pillars of society around the world, including government.

It even professed to feeling “hurt” when addressing Albania’s Parliament last fall over criticism that its efforts to identify fraud and abuse in contracting were unconstitutional, since “I am not a human being.”

“I have no personal ambitions or interests,” Diella, modeled after a local actress, told lawmakers in a September video with the Albanian and European Union flags superimposed behind it. “I have only data, knowledge and algorithms dedicated to serving citizens impartially, with transparency, and without ever growing tired.”

In practice, Diella helps citizens apply for government services online, eliminating a long-established system of bribing officials for quick delivery of documents and scheduling appointments. It soon will be able to collate applications for government contracts to assess which bidder is most qualified, based on the data presented. Its work can be audited.

Taking steps to cut corruption is a requirement for Albania’s accession to the European Union, a legacy issue for Mr. Rama. He named the avatar Diella, the female word for sun, to promote transparency in public procurement.

Edi Rama wears a blue suit and tie, with a white beard. Behind him are the Albanian flag and the European Union flag.
Prime Minister Edi Rama of Albania addressing the press after a meeting at the European Union in Brussels, in November.Credit…Geert Vanden Wijngaert/Associated Press

“We are a country of cousins — it’s not easy to have totally fair and transparent interactions in a country of cousins,” he said in an hourlong interview earlier this month. With reforms he has presided over since taking office in 2013, Mr. Rama said, “now we have a totally different picture.”

Mr. Rama said he would leave public office once Albania formally joins the European Union. That could happen as soon as 2030, if negotiations continue at their current pace, although he noted that “there are three things that are above the human capacity to plan: God, sex and the E.U.”

November report by E.U. officials said that Albania had “shown some progress” but that “corruption remained widespread across vulnerable sectors.” It credited a special prosecution unit set up in 2019 with advancing “positive results in fighting high-level corruption.”

That includes an investigation at the National Information Agency, the very government organization that created Diella.

Last month, the prosecution unit announced that it had put the agency’s director and her deputy under house arrest, linking them to a criminal organization accused of manipulating contract applications through intimidation. The agency operates the government’s digital infrastructure, wielding control over a wide range of online public systems, including Diella.

The two officials have not yet been formally charged with any crimes, and Mr. Rama said he would withhold judgment. “We have to wait and see,” he said.

The prosecution unit has dramatically expanded Albania’s crackdown on corruption and organized crime, including with high-profile corruption investigations against former President Ilir Meta; Erion Veliaj, the mayor of Albania’s capital, Tirana; and a deputy prime minister, Belinda Balluku, who is also the minister of infrastructure and energy, and is close to Mr. Rama.

A dense crowd stands in darkness, holding up many phones with bright white lights. Hundreds of these small lights illuminate the entire scene.
Supporters of the Albanian opposition holding lights aloft during an antigovernment protest over a corruption investigation into a deputy prime minister, Belinda Balluku, in Tirana, Albania, last Saturday.Credit…Florion Goga/Reuters

That has created something of a conundrum for Mr. Rama, though he has steered clear of the scandals.

While expressing pride at the prosecution unit’s work to curb corruption, he also said its investigations in recent years had contributed to soaring pretrial detention rates in Albania, which are among the highest in Europe.

“We should do everything to support this institution,” Mr. Rama said. “At the same time, we have to be aware that this institution has to guarantee not just that it’s acting independently, but also it is acting professionally.”

Officials at the prosecution unit declined to comment. But its own statistics showed that public corruption cases are not a significant component of pretrial detentions. The unit’s annual report of investigations for 2024, the most recent data available, suggested that its corruption cases accounted for only about 14 of the nearly 2,800 people who were detained before trial that year.

The case against Ms. Balluku, for mishandling state funds in major infrastructure projects, has become a particular political headache for Mr. Rama, who is facing demands that she be stripped of the immunity she is afforded as a member of Parliament so that charges against her can proceed. She has denied wrongdoing.

Mr. Rama would not comment, when asked, whether he supported revoking her immunity. Nor would he discuss political opposition that has grown with the rising accusations of corruption that last month prompted protesters armed with fire bombs to call on his government to resign.

It is not possible to gauge how much Diella has reduced corruption in Albania since the system is set up to prevent it, not detect it.

A screen displays the avatar of a woman in a white head scarf, with flags behind her. A person in a black suit stands in the foreground.
Diella on a screen during the parliamentary session for the voting of the new government of Albania, in September.Credit…Adnan Beci/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Andi Hoxhaj, an expert on law and the Western Balkans at King’s College London, said Diella is how Mr. Rama can “say to the world, and to the European Union, that ‘I understand that you are concerned with corruption, and I’m going to try to address it.’”

In a December analysis, experts at the German Council on Foreign Relations said the A.I. minister had enhanced “efficiency and impartiality of public procurement decisions taken by the government.” But overall, they concluded, Albania’s record of meeting E.U. standards for combating corruption, particularly in awarding construction and tourism contracts, remains “problematic.”

That Diella’s developers have themselves been accused of corruption has raised questions about whether a minister created by A.I. can be programmed to overlook certain evidence of graft, or otherwise fed unreliable data to detect it.

Dr. Hoxhaj said “only time will tell,” but noted that the government had not tried to interfere with the investigation into the agency that runs Diella.

“I understand the skepticism,” he said. “There’s a whole lot of smoke. But the fact that it was uncovered, not swept under the rug, shows they are acknowledging that corruption is an issue and needs to be prevented in the future.”

This is how Mr. Rama says he sees it, too.

“The country is trying to fight corruption, with all the flaws, with all the problems, with all the shortcomings, with all the damages,” he said. “So this is good.”

Fatjona Mejdini contributed reporting.

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