DutchNews.nl - DutchNews.nl brings daily news from The Netherlands in English 13 June 2026
Newsletter Donate Advertise
  • News
  • Life in the Netherlands
  • Jobs
  • Partner content
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
  • About us
  • Search
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Politics
  • Art and culture
  • Sport
  • Europe
  • Society
  • Environment
  • Health
  • Housing
  • Education
  • News
    • Home
    • Economy
    • Politics
    • Art and culture
    • Sport
    • Europe
    • Society
    • Environment
    • Health
    • Housing
    • Education
  • Life in the Netherlands
    • Latest
    • Opinion
    • Books
    • Travel
    • 10 Questions
    • Learning Dutch
    • Inburgering with DN
    • Food & Drink
    • Ask us anything
  • Jobs
  • Partner content
  • Podcast
  • Advertise
  • About us
    • Donate
    • Team
    • Advertise
    • Contact us
    • Writing for Dutch News
    • Privacy
    • Newsletter
  • Search

Dutch secrecy rules hide backers of Trump-linked Albanian resort

June 12, 2026 Louis Gore-Langton
Anti-corruption protests in Albania's capital Tirana. Photo: Adnan Beci / AFP

See more DutchNews articles in your Google search results

See more DutchNews articles in your Google search results

Add as a favourite source on Google Add DutchNews as a favourite source on Google

A luxury resort project in Albania that has triggered nationwide corruption protests was owned through the Netherlands for nearly two years – protected by Dutch financial structures that kept its backers unnamed and gave its investors a route around Albanian courts.

The project, linked to Jared Kushner, US president Donald Trump’s son-in-law, would turn a stretch of protected lagoon near the southern city of Vlora into an exclusive resort. The lagoon is a refuge for flamingos and other rare wildlife, and residents say land their families have farmed for generations is being taken from them.

Protests have spread across the country, with demonstrators demanding the resignation of prime minister Edi Rama, whose government approved the project despite unresolved court cases over who owns the land. It could complicate the country’s attempt to join the EU.

The names on the register

On paper, the €4 billion project’s only named owners were two Amsterdam-based business people – Nikita Vinogradov and Zoya Gyurova – who run Dutch Trust Management, a firm paid to give foreign-owned companies a Dutch director and address.

The real backers appear nowhere. A person only has to be named on the register if they own more than a quarter of a company, and everyone behind the resort stays below that line. The ownership chain, first traced by the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, runs through Amsterdam companies including one it reports is held by five unnamed Albanians.

When nobody crosses the line, the register names the people managing the structure instead. By remaining invisible, beneficiaries stay beyond public scrutiny for conflicts of interest, and routing through the Netherlands is an avenue for tax avoidance.

Vinogradov told DutchNews that licensed trust offices carry out comprehensive checks, including establishing who ultimately owns the companies they manage and where the money comes from. Where land is involved, he said, the firm conducts “enhanced due diligence”, such as verifying legal titles and permits.

The register also shows the project’s Dutch parent company sold its entire stake to Sazan Development Holding, registered at the Qatar Financial Centre in Doha, on May 7 – as the protests gathered pace – for €306,000. The ownership record has not yet been updated, and US media have linked the project to Kushner’s investment firm and to two Qatari billionaire brothers.

Why the Netherlands

The case shows how hard the Dutch system makes it to see who owns what, said Vincent Kiezebrink, a researcher at SOMO, the Amsterdam-based Centre for Research on Multinational Corporations.

The 25%-ownership rule, combined with a European court ruling that closed the Dutch ownership register to the public in 2022, means “you can’t track beneficial ownership for this Albanian project”, he told DutchNews.

The Netherlands often attracts foreign investors with no other tie to the country through its treaties, Kiezebrink said. A 2004 tax treaty can lower the Albanian tax on the investment’s returns, while a 1994 investment treaty lets Dutch-based investors take any dispute with Albania to closed-door international arbitration rather than its courts.

Researchers at the University of Amsterdam have ranked the Netherlands the world’s biggest conduit for corporate money flowing to tax havens, and the Netherlands considered banning trust offices altogether, before deciding against it in 2022.

Share this article Add DutchNews to Google
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Copy URL
Business Environment Europe Financial services
Thank you for donating to DutchNews.nl.

We could not provide the Dutch News service, and keep it free of charge, without the generous support of our readers. Your donations allow us to report on issues you tell us matter, and provide you with a summary of the most important Dutch news each day.

Make a donation
Latest
Show more
Multiple arrests and seizures after Amsterdam gym explosion
Dutch secrecy rules hide backers of Trump-linked Albanian resort
Cabinet plans ban on online gambling ads and bonuses
Inflation to stay below 3% despite war, Dutch central bank says
What does the EU migration pact mean for the Netherlands?
NewsHomeEconomyPoliticsArt and cultureSportEuropeSocietyEnvironmentHealthHousingEducation
Life in the NetherlandsLatestOpinionBooksTravel10 QuestionsLearning DutchInburgering with DNFood & DrinkAsk us anything
Partner content
Advertise
About usDonateTeamAdvertiseContact usWriting for Dutch NewsPrivacyNewsletter
© 2026 DutchNews | Cookie settings

Help us to keep providing you with up-to-date news about this month's Dutch general election.

Our thanks to everyone who donates regularly to Dutch News. It costs money to produce our daily news service, our original features and daily newsletters, and we could not do it without you.

If you have not yet made a donation, or did so a while ago, you can do so via these links

The DutchNews.nl team

Donate now

Dutchnews Survey

Please help us making DutchNews.nl a better read by taking part in a short survey.

Take part now