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Kosovo and Albania agree to develop Pristina-Tirana digital 5G corridor

The 5G corridor will cover the Ibrahim Rugova highway, which runs from Kosovo to Albania

The Kosovo Ministry of Economy and Environment told Radio Free Europe that Kosovo and Albania have agreed to jointly create a Pristina-Tirana “digital 5G corridor” that will cover the Ibrahim Rugova highway, which runs from Kosovo to the border with Albania.

The memorandum, signed in Tirana last week, laid out plans for the countries to co-operate in drafting policies for the development of the 5G network and was just one of four agreements signed between by the governments.

Kosovo’s Prime Minister Avdullah Hoti, provided further insight, stating, “In most of these agreements, we have a regional perspective such as the railway project that connects the port of Durres to Pristina and then continues to other parts of the Balkans and Central Europe.”

Currently, neither Kosovo or Albania have a 5G network and spectrum auctions have not yet been scheduled. However, in February, Telekom Albania selected Ericsson as the sole supplier to modernize its radio and core networks, suggesting that the operator is certainly looking towards the upgrading its networks.

“Our strategic goal is to become the first choice for Albanian users when it comes to mobile communication services,” said Emil Georgakiev, CEO of Telekom Albania. “This means ensuring a superior customer experience. We believe that a full network swap and modernization is the right way to start this journey.”

Specifically, Ericsson will upgrade Telekom Albania’s network capabilities to gigabit LTE class while also making the network 5G ready using the latest Ericsson Radio System equipment. In addition, the vendor will provide a new virtualized core network based on the Ericsson Cloud Core, Ericsson Cloud VoLTE and system verified Network Function Virtual Infrastructure (NFVI) solutions.

When it comes to Kosovo, there has been some drama around the region’s intentions to use — or not use — Huawei as a vendor for its eventual 5G networks. In early September, Serbia and Kosovo signed a list of commitments at the White House, one of which pledged that both would prohibit the use of 5G equipment from “untrusted vendors,” as well as remove equipment from these vendors if it is already in place.

The clause did not name China or Huawei by name; however, considering the Trump Administration’s long-standing attacks on the Chinese vendor, it can be assumed that this was the target.

 

 

ABOUT AUTHOR

Catherine Sbeglia Nin
Catherine Sbeglia Nin
Catherine is the Managing Editor for RCR Wireless News, where she covers topics such as Wi-Fi, network infrastructure, AI and edge computing. She also produced and hosted Arden Media's podcast Well, technically... After studying English and Film & Media Studies at The University of Rochester, she moved to Madison, WI. Having already lived on both coasts, she thought she’d give the middle a try. So far, she likes it very much.