SURINAME

soorĭnämˈ, –nămˈ, officially Republic of Suriname, republic (1995 est. pop. 430,000), 63,037 sq mi (163,266 sq km), NE South America, on the Atlantic Ocean. Part of the Guiana region, it is separated from Brazil on the south by the Tumuc-Humac Mts., from Guyana on the west by the Corantijn (Courantyne or Corentyne) River, and from French Guiana on the east by the Maroni River. The capital and largest city is Paramaribo, which is situated on the Suriname River.

Land and People

Suriname is mostly rolling highlands covered by tropical rain forests. The relatively small population is concentrated along the flat coastal plain, where the use of dikes makes cultivation possible. The people are largely of Asian Indian or mixed African and European ancestry; there is a significant Indonesian minority. Dutch is the official language, although Sranang Tongo, a creole English, is widely spoken. Hinduism, the Roman Catholic and Moravian churches, and Islam are the predominant faiths.

Economy and Government

Agriculture accounts for about 15% of the gross domestic product. Rice is the principal crop, and sugarcane, coffee, bananas, and coconuts are also cultivated. Suriname is one of the world's great producers of bauxite, which accounts for about 70% of export revenues. Other exports are alumina, rice, wood and wood products, fish, shrimps, and bananas. The leading industries process bauxite, alumina, foodstuffs, fish, and timber. Fluctuations in world bauxite prices have a strong impact on the country's economy.

Suriname operates under the constitution of 1987. Executive power is held by the president, who is elected by the unicameral national assembly for a five-year term. Members of the national assembly are elected by popular vote and also serve five-year terms. The country is divided into ten administrative districts.

History

The first Dutch expeditions to the Guiana region took place in 1597–98, and the first Dutch colony, on Essequibo Island in present-day Guyana, was founded in 1616. The Dutch West India Company was founded in 1621 to exploit the territory. The Dutch hold on the east coast was interrupted by English and French attacks and by a slave insurrection (1762–63). The Treaty of Breda gave all English territory in Guiana to the Dutch, but in 1815 the Congress of Vienna awarded the area that is now Guyana to Britain while reaffirming the Dutch hold on Dutch Guiana (present-day Suriname). The Netherlands granted Dutch Guiana a parliament in 1866.

In 1954, Suriname officially became an internally autonomous part of the kingdom of the Netherlands, and in 1975 it became independent. Just prior to independence, some 100,000 Surinamese, mainly of Asian descent, migrated to the Netherlands. In 1980 the government was ousted by a military coup led by Sgt. Major Désiré Bouterse, and the soldiers' civilian allies were installed in office. Bouterse assumed complete control from 1982 to 1987.

A variety of insurgent guerrilla groups formed in the mid-1980s and did considerable damage to the country's infrastructure and major industries. Democracy was restored in 1988 and guerrilla activity decreased. President Rameswak Shankar, however, was ousted from office in a Dec., 1990, military coup led by Bouterse, who again installed his political allies. New elections (1991) gave his opponents, the four-party New Front for Democracy (NFD) coalition, control of parliament, and NFD leader Ronald Venetiaan became president. He implemented free-market reforms, but inflation soared and the economy continued to contract.

Bouterse resigned as army chief in 1992 amid corruption charges. In 1996, however, a former aide to Bouterse, Jules Wijdenbosch of the National Democratic party (NDP), won the presidency. Bouterse served as an adviser to Wijdenbosch's government until Apr., 1999; three months later he was convicted in absentia in the Netherlands of drug trafficking. Venetiaan's New Front won a resounding victory in the May, 2000, parliamentary elections, and the former president was reelected to the office in Aug., 2000.

Bibliography

See W. N. Van de Poll, Surinam, the Country and Its People (tr. 1951); M. J. Herskovits and F. J. Herskovits, Suriname Folklore (1937, repr. 1969); R. A. L. Hoefte, Suriname (1990).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Suriname  - 780 results

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...aan nakomelingen van Brits-Indische immigranten in Suriname" The education of descendants of British Indian immigrants in Suriname . In Van Brits-Indisch emigrant tot burger van Suriname , 83-89. The Hague: Wieringa, 1963. Kalff S...
...Jules M. Developments and Changes in Suriname A Pictorial Account . Paramaribo: Dubois...Egger J. L. Raciale politiekvoering in Suriname, 1948-1980 . Paramaribo: L. O...Essed Frank E. Development History of Suriname from Exploitation Towards Mobilization...
...game of counters. This is played in Suriname as it is in the Caribbean, and in Africa...day names are found in bush and town in Suriname. They are met with in Jamaica and names...soul, in the same manner as they are in Suriname. Afica , Africa. This is the Saramacca...
...Bonaparte Prince Roland, Les Habitants de Suriname , Paris, 1884. Cundall F., and Anderson...Haan, Verslag van de Expeditie Naar de Suriname Rivier , Tijdschrift van het Kon. Ned...Charles, Een Blik in Het Verleden Van Suriname . Paramaribo, 1930. Ellis George W...
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journal articles on: Suriname  - 277 results

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...the Military: Re-democratization in Suriname. by Chaitram Singh INTRODUCTION There...settings. This paper examines the case of Suriname, a deviant case, where non-commissioned...and missions. (11) THE 1980 COUP IN SURINAME On February 25, 1980, the elected government...
...Stumbling after Eden in the Jungles of Suriname. by Charles Wilkins The Riverbones...Stumbling after Eden in the Jungles of Suriname. Andrew Westoll. Toronto: McClelland...known South American country of Suriname." The book is both the story of...
...Addressing Violence against Women in Suriname by Maggie Schmeitz Introduction Violence...been ignored as a societal problem in Suriname. Domestic Violence in particular was...Entering the decade of the 1990s, Suriname had just one nongovernmental organization...
Archaeological Investigation of Suriname Maroon Ancestral Communities by Cheryl...century Maroon ancestral settlements in Suriname, South America. Maroons are descendants...and Matawai site, Tuido located in the Suriname and Saramaka River basins, respectively...
...the Ball to Holland by Daniel Titinger Suriname is a country. Thats the first thing...spot thats smaller than your fingertip. Suriname is the size of the state of Georgia...of evidence to prove it. Theres the Suriname River, Suriname Airways, the Suriname...
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magazine articles on: Suriname  - 206 results

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Suriname a Culture of Tolerance: This Thirty...largest nature reserve in the world, and Suriname has the worlds highest percentage of tropical...very carefully, as you travel throughout Suriname youll hear more than twenty languages...
Hot Spots: Suriname by Hans Belcsak Suriname has a new president, one with a lot of political and personal...years in prison for smuggling cocaine. He is also on trial in Suriname for the death of 15 alleged opponents of his military regime...
Green Reserves for Suriname by Larry Luxner Huge investment in...conservationists." So perhaps the news out of Suriname--which has more rain forest than...virgin tropical forest. "The people of Suriname are glad to invest in nature because...
Green Reserves for Suriname by Larry Luxner Huge investment in...conservationists." So perhaps the news out of Suriname--which has more rain forest than...virgin tropical forest. "The people of Suriname are glad to invest in nature because...
...Ago, Maria Sibylla Merian Set out for Suriname to Pursue Her Lifes Passion-Moths and...disembark today from a cruise ship in Suriname bent on scientific pursuits, no one...butterfly. In preparation for the trip to Suriname, the divorced single mother sold 255...
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newspaper articles on: Suriname  - 120 results

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DPW Buys 2 Suriname Terminals. DUBAI (Dow Jones) - Dubai...companies operating cargo terminals in Suriname, giving it a foothold in the South American...Port in the capital Paramaribo, and in Suriname Port Services, the owner of a private...
Gold Rush Threatens Suriname Rainforest. PARAMARIBO, Suriname (AP) - It looks like a meteor strike: From out of...Guiana and Guyana. But nothing seems to stop them in Suriname, a country rich in resources with the weakest law enforcement...
...Volunteer Bloomingdale Woman Killed in Suriname. Byline: Jake Griffin jgriffin...volunteering with the Peace Corps in Suriname, according to media reports out of the...in May 2006 and had been stationed in Suriname to help build a community center for...
...of Amazing Rare Things; Maria Sibylla Merian Travelled to Suriname in South America in 1699 to Paint This Picture of a Crocodile...and a snake. Merian undertook the long anddangerous trip to Suriname, South America, in 1699, aged 52, and the detailedbook...
...career in professional footballer in the Suriname top flight as well as representing the...father was a professional footballer in Suriname, he played at the highest level and...When I was seven I came to Holland from Suriname and I started playing about a year later...
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encyclopedia articles on: Suriname  - 18 results

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SURINAME soorinam , nam , officially Republic of Suriname, republic (2005 est. pop. 438,000), 63,037 sq...and largest city is Paramaribo , which is situated on the Suriname River. Land and People Suriname is mostly rolling highlands...
...Ecuador , Guyana , Paraguay , Peru , Suriname , Uruguay , and Venezuela and the overseas...descent in NE Brazil, French Guiana, Suriname, Guyana, Venezuela, and Colombia...in Brazil, and bauxite in Guyana and Suriname. Subsistence farming is widespread...
...N by the Atlantic Ocean, on the E by Suriname, on the S and W by Brazil, and on the...On the east Guyana is separated from Suriname by the Courantyne (Corantijn or Corentyne...ruin. The boundaries with Venezuela and Suriname continued to be a matter of dispute...
...region, it is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean on the north, Suriname on the west, and Brazil on the south and east. Cayenne is...Brazil. The Maroni River on the west forms the border with Suriname . French Guiana has two districts ( arrondissements ): Cayenne...
PARAMARIBO par mar ibo, city (1996 pop. 222,843), capital of Suriname, on the Suriname River, c.10 mi (16 km) from the Atlantic Ocean. It exports bauxite, sugarcane, rice, cacao, coffee...
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