Albanians go to the polls today for a crucial vote that could determine whether one of Europe's poorest countries has a chance of joining the European Union in the foreseeable future.
But on the eve of the election, the agency tasked with certifying the vote, the Central Electoral Commission remained paralysed, with no progress made in a bid to replace three of the commission's seven members.
They quit in April over a dispute between conservative Prime Minister Sali Berisha's ruling coalition and Edi Rama's Socialist-led opposition.
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But even in the run-up to the elections, accusations of vote-buying and voter roll irregularities were already flying, sparking fears of a repeat of the 2009 polls which descended into a political crisis.
Eugen Wollfarth, head of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) mission in Tirana, called on politicians to "consider what is best for the country," which became a NATO member in 2009.
A Western diplomat who asked not to be named warned of a "great risk the results (of today's polls) would be contested, either by the outgoing coalition or by the opposition."
Brussels, which has twice rejected Tirana's EU membership application, said the vote "represents a crucial test for the country's democratic institutions and its progress towards the European Union".
Since the collapse of Enver Hoxha's communist regime in 1990, polls in the country have been marred by violence and allegations of vote-fixing.
Analysts have predicted a tight race between Berisha's and Rama's parties.
Some 600 international observers will monitor the polls which open at 0500 GMT today and close at 1700 GMT, while first preliminary results are expected tomorrow.