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Wikipedia

Suriname

Coordinates: 4°N 56°W / 4°N 56°W / 4; -56

Suriname (/ˈsʊərɪnæm, -nɑːm/ (listen)), officially the Republic of Suriname (Dutch: Republiek Suriname [reːpyˌblik ˌsyːriˈnaːmə]), is a country in northern South America. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the north, French Guiana to the east, Guyana to the west, and Brazil to the south. At just under 165,000 square kilometers (64,000 square miles), it is the smallest sovereign state in South America.[a]

Republic of Suriname
Republiek Suriname (Dutch)
Motto: JustitiaPietasFides (Latin)
Gerechtigheid – Vroomheid – Vertrouwen (Dutch)
"Justice – Piety – Trust"
Anthem: God zij met ons Suriname (Dutch)
"God be with our Suriname"
Political map showing the districts and borders of the Republic of Suriname
Capital
and largest city
Paramaribo
5°50′N 55°10′W / 5.833°N 55.167°W / 5.833; -55.167
Official languagesDutch
Recognised regional languages
Lingua francaDutch and Sranan Tongo
Other languages
Ethnic groups
Religion
Demonym(s)Surinamese
GovernmentUnitary assembly-independent republic
• President
Chan Santokhi
Ronnie Brunswijk
Marinus Bee
Iwan Rasoelbaks (acting)
LegislatureNational Assembly
Independence
15 December 1954
25 November 1975
Area
• Total
163,821 km2 (63,252 sq mi) (90th)
• Water (%)
1.1
Population
• 2022 estimate
632,638[7] (170th)
• Density
3.9/km2 (10.1/sq mi) (231st)
GDP (PPP)2022 estimate
• Total
$10.707 billion[8]
• Per capita
$17,350[8]
GDP (nominal)2022 estimate
• Total
$3.011 billion[8]
• Per capita
$4,880[8]
HDI (2021) 0.730[9]
high · 99th
CurrencySurinamese dollar (SRD)
Time zoneUTC-3 (SRT)
Date formatdd-mm-yyyy
Driving sideleft
Calling code+597
ISO 3166 codeSR
Internet TLD.sr

It has a population of approximately 612,985,[11][12] dominated by descendants from the slaves and labourers brought in from Africa and Asia by the Dutch Empire and Republic. Most of the people live by the country's (north) coast, in and around its capital and largest city, Paramaribo. It is also one of the least densely populated countries on Earth. Situated slightly north of the equator, Suriname is a tropical country dominated by rainforests. Its extensive tree cover is vital to the country's efforts to mitigate climate change and maintain carbon negativity.[13][b] A developing country with a relatively high level of human development, Suriname's economy is heavily dependent on its abundant natural resources, namely bauxite, gold, petroleum, and agricultural products.

Suriname was inhabited as early as the fourth millennium BC by various indigenous peoples, including the Arawaks, Caribs, and Wayana. Europeans arrived in the 16th century, with the Dutch establishing control over much of the country's current territory by the late 17th century. During the Dutch colonial period, Suriname was a lucrative source of sugar, its plantation economy driven by African slave labour, and after abolition of slavery in 1863, by indentured servants from Asia, predominantly from British India, as well as the Dutch East Indies. In 1954, Suriname became one of the constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. On 25 November 1975, it left the Kingdom to become an independent state. In contrast to Indonesia's earlier war for independence from the Netherlands, the path toward Suriname's independence was an initiative of the then left-wing Dutch government. Suriname continues to maintain close diplomatic, economic, and cultural ties with the Netherlands.

Suriname is considered a culturally Caribbean country, and is a member of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM). It is the only sovereign nation outside of Europe where Dutch is the official and prevailing language of government, business, media, and education.[14] According to research by the Dutch Language Union, Dutch is the native language of 60% of Surinamese.[15] Sranan Tongo, an English-based creole language, is a widely used lingua franca.

Suriname is part of several major international and intergovernmental institutions or groupings including the United Nations and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation.

Etymology

The name Suriname may derive from an indigenous people called Surinen, who inhabited the area at the time of European contact.[16] The suffix -ame, common in Surinamese river and place names (see also the Coppename River), may come from aima or eima, meaning river or creek mouth, in Lokono, an Arawak language spoken in the country.[17]

The earliest European sources give variants of "Suriname" as the name of the river on which colonies were eventually founded. Lawrence Kemys wrote in his Relation of the Second Voyage to Guiana of passing a river called "Shurinama" as he travelled along the coast. In 1598, a fleet of three Dutch ships visiting the Wild Coast mention passing the river "Surinamo". In 1617, a Dutch notary spelled the name of the river on which a Dutch trading post had existed three years earlier as "Surrenant".[18]

British settlers, who in 1630 founded the first European colony at Marshall's Creek along the Suriname River, spelled the name as "Surinam"; this would long remain the standard spelling in English.[19] The Dutch navigator David Pietersz. de Vries wrote of travelling up the "Sername" river in 1634 until he encountered the English colony there; the terminal vowel remained in future Dutch spellings and pronunciations. In 1640, a Spanish manuscript entitled "General Description of All His Majesty's Dominions in America" called the river "Soronama". In 1653, instructions given to a British fleet sailing to meet Lord Willoughby in Barbados, which at the time was the seat of English colonial government in the region, again spelled the name of the colony "Surinam". A 1663 royal charter said the region around the river was "called Serrinam also Surrinam".[18]

As a result of the "Surrinam" spelling, 19th-century British sources offered the folk etymology "Surryham", saying it was the name given to the Suriname River by Lord Willoughby in the 1660s in honour of the Duke of Norfolk and Earl of Surrey when an English colony was established under a grant from King Charles II.[18] This folk etymology can be found repeated in later English-language sources.[20][21]

When the territory was taken over by the Dutch, it became part of a group of colonies known as Dutch Guiana. The official spelling of the country's English name was changed from "Surinam" to "Suriname" in January 1978, but "Surinam" can still be found in English, such as Suriname's national airline Surinam Airways. The older English name is reflected in the English pronunciation, /ˈsjʊərɪnæm, -nɑːm/. In Dutch, the official language of Suriname, the pronunciation is [ˌsyriˈnaːmə], with the main stress on the third syllable and a schwa terminal vowel.

History

 
Maroon village, along Suriname River, 1955

Indigenous settlement of Suriname dates back to 3,000 BC. The largest tribes were the Arawak, a nomadic coastal tribe that lived from hunting and fishing. They were the first inhabitants in the area. The Carib also settled in the area and conquered the Arawak by using their superior sailing ships. They settled in Galibi (Kupali Yumï, meaning "tree of the forefathers") at the mouth of the Marowijne River. While the larger Arawak and Carib tribes lived along the coast and savanna, smaller groups of indigenous people lived in the inland rainforest, such as the Akurio, Trió, Warrau, and Wayana.

Colonial period

Beginning in the 16th century, French, Spanish and English explorers visited the area. A century later, Dutch and English settlers established plantation colonies along the many rivers in the fertile Guiana plains. The earliest documented colony in Guiana was an English settlement named Marshall's Creek along the Suriname River.[19] After that there was another short-lived English colony called Surinam that lasted from 1650 to 1667.

Disputes arose between the Dutch and the English for control of this territory. In 1667, during negotiations leading to the Treaty of Breda after the Second Anglo-Dutch War, the Dutch decided to keep the nascent plantation colony of Surinam they had gained from the English. In return the English kept New Amsterdam, the main city of the former colony of New Netherland in North America on the mid-Atlantic coast. The British renamed it after the Duke of York: New York City.

In 1683, the Society of Suriname was founded by the city of Amsterdam, the Van Aerssen van Sommelsdijck family, and the Dutch West India Company. The society was chartered to manage and defend the colony. The planters of the colony relied heavily on African slaves to cultivate, harvest and process the commodity crops of coffee, cocoa, sugar cane and cotton plantations along the rivers. Planters' treatment of the slaves was notoriously brutal even by the standards of the time[22]—historian C. R. Boxer wrote that "man's inhumanity to man just about reached its limits in Surinam"[23]—and many slaves escaped the plantations. In November 1795, the Society was nationalized by the Batavian Republic and from then on the Batavian Republic and its legal successors (the Kingdom of Holland and the Kingdom of the Netherlands) governed the territory as a national colony, barring a period of British occupation between 1799 and 1802, and between 1804 and 1816.

With the help of the native South Americans living in the adjoining rain forests, these runaway slaves established a new and unique culture in the interior that was highly successful in its own right. They were known collectively in English as Maroons, in French as Nèg'Marrons (literally meaning "brown negroes", that is "pale-skinned negroes"), and in Dutch as Marrons. The Maroons gradually developed several independent tribes through a process of ethnogenesis, as they were made up of slaves from different African ethnicities. These tribes include the Saramaka, Paramaka, Ndyuka or Aukan, Kwinti, Aluku or Boni, and Matawai.

 
Waterfront houses in Paramaribo, 1955

The Maroons often raided plantations to recruit new members from the slaves and capture women, as well as to acquire weapons, food and supplies. They sometimes killed planters and their families in the raids; colonists built defenses, which were significant enough that they were shown on 18th-century maps.[24]

The colonists also mounted armed campaigns against the Maroons, who generally escaped through the rainforest, which they knew much better than the colonists did. To end hostilities, in the 18th century the European colonial authorities signed several peace treaties with different tribes. They granted the Maroons sovereign status and trade rights in their inland territories, giving them autonomy.

Abolition of slavery

From 1861 to 1863, with the American Civil War underway, and enslaved people escaping to Northern territory controlled by the Union, United States President Abraham Lincoln and his administration looked abroad for places to relocate people who were freed from enslavement and who wanted to leave the United States. It opened negotiations with the Dutch government regarding African-American emigration to and colonization of the Dutch colony of Suriname. Nothing came of the idea, and the idea was dropped after 1864.[25]

The Netherlands abolished slavery in Suriname in 1863, under a gradual process that required slaves to work on plantations for 10 transition years for minimal pay, which was considered as partial compensation for their masters. After that transition period expired in 1873, most freedmen largely abandoned the plantations where they had worked for several generations in favor of the capital city, Paramaribo. Some of them were able to purchase the plantations they worked on, especially in the district of Para and Coronie. Their descendants still live on those grounds today. Several plantation owners did not pay their former enslaved workers the pay they owed them for the ten years following 1863. They paid the workers with the property rights of the ground of the plantation in order to escape their debt to the workers.[26]

 
Javanese immigrants brought as contract workers from the Dutch East Indies. Picture was taken between 1880 and 1900.

As a plantation colony, Suriname had an economy dependent on labor-intensive commodity crops. To make up for a shortage of labor, the Dutch recruited and transported contract or indentured laborers from the Dutch East Indies (modern Indonesia) and India (the latter through an arrangement with the British, who then ruled the area). In addition, during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, small numbers of laborers, mostly men, were recruited from China and the Middle East.

Although Suriname's population remains relatively small, because of this complex colonization and exploitation, it is one of the most ethnically and culturally diverse countries in the world.[27][28]

Decolonization

During World War II, on 23 November 1941, under an agreement with the Netherlands government-in-exile, the United States sent 2,000 soldiers to Suriname to protect the bauxite mines to support the Allies' war effort.[29][30] In 1942, the Dutch government-in-exile began to review the relations between the Netherlands and its colonies in terms of the post-war period.[31]

In 1954, Suriname became one of the constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, along with the Netherlands Antilles and the Netherlands. In this construction, the Netherlands retained control of its defense and foreign affairs. In 1974, the local government, led by the National Party of Suriname (NPS) (whose membership was largely Creole, meaning ethnically African or mixed African-European) started negotiations with the Dutch government leading towards full independence, which was granted on 25 November 1975. A large part of Suriname's economy for the first decade following independence was fueled by foreign aid provided by the Dutch government.

Independence

 
Henck Arron, Beatrix and Johan Ferrier on 25 November 1975

The first President of the country was Johan Ferrier, the former governor, with Henck Arron (the then leader of the NPS) as Prime Minister. In the years leading up to independence, nearly one-third of the population of Suriname emigrated to the Netherlands, amidst concern that the new country would fare worse under independence than it had as a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Surinamese politics did degenerate into ethnic polarisation and corruption soon after independence, with the NPS using Dutch aid money for partisan purposes. Its leaders were accused of fraud in the 1977 elections, in which Arron won a further term, and the discontent was such that a large portion of the population fled to the Netherlands, joining the already significant Surinamese community there.[32][33][34]

1980 military coup

On 25 February 1980, a military coup overthrew Arron's government. It was initiated by a group of 16 sergeants, led by Dési Bouterse.[14] Opponents of the military regime attempted counter-coups in April 1980, August 1980, 15 March 1981, and again on 12 March 1982. The first counter attempt was led by Fred Ormskerk,[35] the second by Marxist-Leninists,[36] the third by Wilfred Hawker, and the fourth by Surendre Rambocus.

Hawker escaped from prison during the fourth counter-coup attempt, but he was captured and summarily executed. Between 2 am and 5 am on 7 December 1982, the military, under Bouterse's leadership, rounded up 13 prominent citizens who had criticized the military dictatorship and held them at Fort Zeelandia in Paramaribo.[37] The dictatorship had all these men executed over the next three days, along with Rambocus and Jiwansingh Sheombar (who was also involved in the fourth counter-coup attempt).

Civil war, elections, and constitution

The brutal civil war between the Suriname army and Maroons loyal to rebel leader Ronnie Brunswijk, begun in 1986, continued and its effects further weakened Bouterse's position during the 1990s. Due to the civil war, more than 10,000 Surinamese, mostly Maroons, fled to French Guiana in the late 1980s.[38]

National elections were held in 1987. The National Assembly adopted a new constitution that allowed Bouterse to remain in charge of the army. Dissatisfied with the government, Bouterse summarily dismissed the ministers in 1990, by telephone. This event became popularly known as the "Telephone Coup". His power began to wane after the 1991 elections.

At the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, Suriname became the smallest independent South American state to win its first ever Olympic medal as Anthony Nesty won gold in the 100-metre butterfly.

In 1999, the Netherlands tried Bouterse in absentia on drug smuggling charges. He was convicted and sentenced to prison but remained in Suriname.[39] The 1999 Surinamese protests occurred in 1999.

21st century

On 19 July 2010, Bouterse returned to power when he was elected as the president of Suriname.[40] Before his election in 2010, he, along with 24 others, had been charged with the murders of 15 prominent dissidents in the December murders. However, in 2012, two months before the verdict in the trial, the National Assembly extended its amnesty law and provided Bouterse and the others with amnesty of these charges. He was reelected on 14 July 2015.[41] However, Bouterse was convicted by a Surinamese court on 29 November 2019 and given a 20-year sentence for his role in the 1982 killings.[42]

After winning the 2020 elections,[43] Chan Santokhi was the sole nomination for president of Suriname.[44] On 13 July, Santokhi was elected president by acclamation in an uncontested election.[45] He was inaugurated on 16 July in a ceremony without public attendance due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[46]

In February 2023, there were heavy protests against rising living costs in the capital Paramaribo. Protesters accused the government of President Chan Santokhi of corruption. They stormed the National Assembly, demanding the government to resign. However, the government condemned the protests.[47]

Politics

 
National Assembly
 
Court of Justice

The Republic of Suriname is a representative democratic republic, based on the Constitution of 1987. The legislative branch of government consists of a 51-member unicameral National Assembly, simultaneously and popularly elected for a five-year term.

In the elections held on Tuesday, 25 May 2010, the Megacombinatie won 23 of the National Assembly seats followed by Nationale Front with 20 seats. A much smaller number, important for coalition-building, went to the "A-combinatie" and to the Volksalliantie. The parties held negotiations to form coalitions. Elections were held on 25 May 2015, and the National Assembly again elected Dési Bouterse as president.[48]

The president of Suriname is elected for a five-year term by a two-thirds majority of the National Assembly. If at least two-thirds of the National Assembly cannot agree to vote for one presidential candidate, a People's Assembly is formed from all National Assembly delegates and regional and municipal representatives who were elected by popular vote in the most recent national election. The president may be elected by a majority of the People's Assembly called for the special election.

As head of government, the president appoints a sixteen-minister cabinet. A vice president is normally elected for a five-year term at the same time as the president, by a simple majority in the National Assembly or People's Assembly. There is no constitutional provision for removal or replacement of the president, except in the case of resignation.

The judiciary is headed by the High Court of Justice of Suriname (Supreme Court). This court supervises the magistrate courts. Members are appointed for life by the president in consultation with the National Assembly, the State Advisory Council, and the National Order of Private Attorneys.

Foreign relations

Due to Suriname's Dutch colonial history, Suriname had a long-standing special relationship with the Netherlands.

In 1999, Dési Bouterse was convicted and sentenced in absentia in the Netherlands to 11 years of imprisonment for drug trafficking. He was the main suspect in the court case concerning the December murders, the 1982 assassination of opponents of military rule in Fort Zeelandia, Paramaribo. He served as president between 2010 and 2020. These two cases still strain relations between the Netherlands and Suriname.[49]

The Dutch government stated during that time that it would maintain limited contact with the president.[49]

Bouterse was elected as president of Suriname in 2010. The Netherlands in July 2014 dropped Suriname as a member of its development program.[50]

Since 1991, the United States has maintained positive relations with Suriname. The two countries work together through the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative (CBSI) and the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Suriname also receives military funding from the U.S. Department of Defense.[51]

European Union relations and cooperation with Suriname are carried out both on a bilateral and a regional basis. There are ongoing EU-Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) and EU-CARIFORUM dialogues. Suriname is party to the Cotonou Agreement, the partnership agreement among the members of the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States and the European Union.[52]

On 17 February 2005, the leaders of Barbados and Suriname signed the "Agreement for the deepening of bilateral cooperation between the Government of Barbados and the Government of the Republic of Suriname."[53] On 23–24 April 2009, both nations formed a Joint Commission in Paramaribo, Suriname, to improve relations and to expand into various areas of cooperation.[54] They held a second meeting toward this goal on 3–4 March 2011, in Dover, Barbados. Their representatives reviewed issues of agriculture, trade, investment, as well as international transport.[55]

In the late 2000s, Suriname intensified development cooperation with other developing countries. China's South-South cooperation with Suriname has included a number of large-scale infrastructure projects, including port rehabilitation and road construction. Brazil signed agreements to cooperate with Suriname in education, health, agriculture, and energy production.[56]

Military

The Armed Forces of Suriname have three branches: the Army, the Air Force, and the Navy. The president of the Republic is the Supreme Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces (Opperbevelhebber van de Strijdkrachten). The president is assisted by the minister of defence. Beneath the president and minister of defence is the commander of the armed forces (Bevelhebber van de Strijdkrachten). The military branches and regional military commands report to the commander.

After the creation of the Statute of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, the Royal Netherlands Army was entrusted with the defense of Suriname, while the defense of the Netherlands Antilles was the responsibility of the Royal Netherlands Navy. The army set up a separate Troepenmacht in Suriname (Forces in Suriname, TRIS). Upon independence in 1975, this force was turned into the Surinaamse Krijgsmacht (SKM):, Surinamese Armed Forces. After the 1980 overthrow of the government, the SKM was rebranded as the Nationaal Leger (NL), National Army.

In 1965, the Dutch and Americans used Suriname's Coronie site for multiple Nike Apache sounding rocket launches.[57]

Administrative divisions

The country is divided into ten administrative districts, each headed by a district commissioner appointed by the president, who also has the power of dismissal. Suriname is further subdivided into 62 resorts (ressorten).

 
Districts of Suriname
 
The 10 Districts of Suriname
District Capital Area (km2) Area (%) Population
(2012 census)[58]
Population (%) Pop. dens. (inhabitants/km2)
1 Brokopondo Brokopondo 7,364 4.5 15,909 2.9 2.2
2 Commewijne Nieuw-Amsterdam 2,353 1.4 31,420 5.8 13.4
3 Coronie Totness 3,902 2.4 3,391 0.6 0.9
4 Marowijne Albina 4,627 2.8 18,294 3.4 4.0
5 Nickerie Nieuw-Nickerie 5,353 3.3 34,233 6.3 6.4
6 Para Onverwacht 5,393 3.3 24,700 4.6 4.6
7 Paramaribo Paramaribo 182 0.1 240,924 44.5 1323.8
8 Saramacca Groningen 3,636 2.2 17,480 3.2 4.8
9 Sipaliwini none 130,567 79.7 37,065 6.8 0.3
10 Wanica Lelydorp 443 0.3 118,222 21.8 266.9
SURINAME Paramaribo 163,820 100.0 541,638 100.0 3.3

Geography

 
Brokopondo Reservoir surrounded by tropical rainforest
 
The Coppename river, one of many rivers in the interior
 
Leatherback sea turtle on the beach near the village of Galibi

Suriname is the smallest independent country in South America. Situated on the Guiana Shield, it lies mostly between latitudes and 6°N, and longitudes 54° and 58°W. The country can be divided into two main geographic regions. The northern, lowland coastal area (roughly above the line Albina-Paranam-Wageningen) has been cultivated, and most of the population lives here. The southern part consists of tropical rainforest and sparsely inhabited savanna along the border with Brazil, covering about 80% of Suriname's land surface.

The two main mountain ranges are the Bakhuys Mountains and the Van Asch Van Wijck Mountains. Julianatop is the highest mountain in the country at 1,286 metres (4,219 ft) above sea level. Other mountains include Tafelberg at 1,026 metres (3,366 ft), Mount Kasikasima at 718 metres (2,356 ft), Goliathberg at 358 metres (1,175 ft) and Voltzberg at 240 metres (790 ft).

Suriname contains six terrestrial ecoregions: Guayanan Highlands moist forests, Guianan moist forests, Paramaribo swamp forests, Tepuis, Guianan savanna, and Guianan mangroves.[59] Its forest cover is 90.2%, the highest of any nation in the world. The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 9.39/10, ranking it fifth globally out of 172 countries.[60]

Borders

 
Border disputes

Suriname is situated between French Guiana to the east and Guyana to the west. The southern border is shared with Brazil and the northern border is the Atlantic coast. The southernmost borders with French Guiana and Guyana are disputed by these countries along the Marowijne and Corantijn rivers, respectively, while a part of the disputed maritime boundary with Guyana was arbitrated by the Permanent Court of Arbitration convened under the rules set out in Annex VII of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on 20 September 2007.[61][62]

Climate

Lying two to five degrees north of the equator, Suriname has a very hot and wet tropical climate, and temperatures do not vary much throughout the year. Average relative humidity is between 80% and 90%. Its average temperature ranges from 29 to 34 °C (84 to 93 °F). Due to the high humidity, actual temperatures are distorted and may therefore feel up to 6 °C (11 °F) hotter than the recorded temperature.

The year has two wet seasons, from April to August and from November to February. It also has two dry seasons, from August to November and February to April.

Climate change in Suriname is leading to warmer temperatures and more extreme weather events. As a relatively poor country, its contributions to global climate change have been limited. Because of the large forest cover, the country has been running a carbon negative economy since 2014.[63]

Biodiversity and conservation

 
The blue poison dart frog is endemic to Suriname.

Due to the variety of habitats and temperatures, biodiversity in Suriname is considered high.[64] In October 2013, 16 international scientists researching the ecosystems during a three-week expedition in Suriname's Upper Palumeu River Watershed catalogued 1,378 species and found 60—including six frogs, one snake, and 11 fish—that may be previously unknown species.[65][66][67][68] According to the environmental non-profit Conservation International, which funded the expedition, Suriname's ample supply of fresh water is vital to the biodiversity and healthy ecosystems of the region.[69]

Snakewood (Brosimum guianense), a tree, is native to this tropical region of the Americas. Customs in Suriname report that snakewood is often illegally exported to French Guiana, thought to be for the crafts industry.[70]

On 21 March 2013, Suriname's REDD+ Readiness Preparation Proposal (R-PP 2013) was approved by the member countries of the Participants Committee of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF).[71]

As in other parts of Central and South America, indigenous communities have increased their activism to protect their lands and preserve habitat. In March 2015, the "Trio and Wayana communities presented a declaration of cooperation to the National Assembly of Suriname that announces an indigenous conservation corridor spanning 72,000 square kilometers (27,799 square miles) of southern Suriname. The declaration, led by these indigenous communities and with the support of Conservation International (CI) and World Wildlife Fund (WWF) Guianas, comprises almost half of the total area of Suriname."[72] This area includes large forests and is considered "essential for the country's climate resilience, freshwater security, and green development strategy.

The Central Suriname Nature Reserve has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its unspoiled forests and biodiversity. There are many national parks in the country including Galibi National Reserve along the coast; Brownsberg Nature Park and Eilerts de Haan Nature Park in central Suriname; and the Sipaliwani Nature Reserve on the Brazilian border. In all, 16% of the country's land area is national parks and lakes, according to the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre.[73]

Economy

 
A proportional representation of Suriname exports, 2019

Suriname's democracy gained some strength after the turbulent 1990s, and its economy became more diversified and less dependent on Dutch financial assistance. Bauxite (aluminium ore) mining used to be a strong revenue source. The discovery and exploitation of oil and gold has added substantially to Suriname's economic independence. Agriculture, especially rice and bananas, remains a strong component of the economy, and ecotourism is providing new economic opportunities. More than 93% of Suriname's landmass consists of unspoiled rain forest; with the establishment of the Central Suriname Nature Reserve in 1998, Suriname signalled its commitment to conservation of this precious resource. The Central Suriname Nature Reserve became a World Heritage Site in 2000.

 
Ministry of Finance

The economy of Suriname was dominated by the bauxite industry, which accounted for more than 15% of GDP and 70% of export earnings up to 2016. Other main export products include rice, bananas, and shrimp. Suriname has recently started exploiting some of its sizeable oil[74] and gold[75] reserves. About a quarter of the people work in the agricultural sector. The Surinamese economy is very dependent on commerce, its main trade partners being the Netherlands, the United States, Canada, and Caribbean countries, mainly Trinidad and Tobago and the islands of the former Netherlands Antilles.[76]

After assuming power in the fall of 1996, the Wijdenbosch government ended the structural adjustment program of the previous government, claiming it was unfair to the poorer elements of society. Tax revenues fell as old taxes lapsed and the government failed to implement new tax alternatives. By the end of 1997, the allocation of new Dutch development funds was frozen as Surinamese Government relations with the Netherlands deteriorated. Economic growth slowed in 1998, with decline in the mining, construction, and utility sectors. Rampant government expenditures, poor tax collection, a bloated civil service, and reduced foreign aid in 1999 contributed to the fiscal deficit, estimated at 11% of GDP. The government sought to cover this deficit through monetary expansion, which led to a dramatic increase in inflation. It takes longer on average to register a new business in Suriname than virtually any other country in the world (694 days or about 99 weeks).[77]

  • GDP (2010 est.): US$4.794 billion.
  • Annual growth rate real GDP (2010 est.): 3.5%.
  • Per capita GDP (2010 est.): US$9,900.
  • Inflation (2007): 6.4%.
  • Natural resources: Bauxite, gold, oil, iron ore, other minerals; forests; hydroelectric potential; fish and shrimp.
  • Agriculture: Products—rice, bananas, timber, palm kernels, coconuts, peanuts, citrus fruits, and forest products.
  • Industry: Types—alumina, oil, gold, fish, shrimp, lumber.
  • Trade:
    • Exports (2012): US$2.563 billion: alumina, gold, crude oil, lumber, shrimp and fish, rice, bananas. Major consumers: US 26.1%, Belgium 17.6%, UAE 12.1%, Canada 10.4%, Guyana 6.5%, France 5.6%, Barbados 4.7%.[14]
    • Imports (2012): US$1.782 billion: capital equipment, petroleum, foodstuffs, cotton, consumer goods. Major suppliers: US 25.8%, Netherlands 15.8%, China 9.8%, UAE 7.9%, Antigua and Barbuda 7.3%, Netherlands Antilles 5.4%, Japan 4.2%.[14]

Demographics

 
The population of Suriname from 1961 to 2003, in units of 1000. The slowdown and decline in population growth ~1969–1985 reflects a mass migration to the Netherlands and French Guiana.
 
Tribal communities living within the territory of Suriname

In 2022, Suriname had a population of roughly 618,040 according to estimates by the United Nations.[78][79] This compares to 541,638 inhabitants from the 2012 census.[5] The Surinamese populace is characterized by high levels of diversity, wherein no particular demographic group constitutes a majority. This is a legacy of centuries of Dutch rule, which entailed successive periods of forced, contracted, or voluntary migration by various nationalities and ethnic groups from around the world.

Ethnicity

Ethnic groups of Suriname[80]
Ethnic groups percent
Indian
27.4%
Maroon
21.7%
Creole
15.7%
Javanese
14%
Mixed
13.4%
Chinese
7.3%
Amerindian
3.8%
White
1%
Other
2.3%

The largest ethnic group are East Indians, who form over a quarter of the population (27.4%).[81][82][83][84][85][86] The vast majority are descendants of 19th-century indentured workers from India, hailing mostly from Bhojpuri speaking areas of modern Bihar, Jharkhand, and northeastern Uttar Pradesh, Haryana and southeastern Tamil Nadu. If counted as one ethnic group, the Afro-Surinamese are the largest community, at around 37.4%; however, they are usually divided into two cultural/ethnic groups: the Creoles and the Maroons. Surinamese Maroons, whose ancestors are mostly runaway slaves that fled to the interior, comprise 21.7% of the population; they are divided into six tribes: Ndyuka (Aucans), Saramaccans, Paramaccans, Kwinti, Aluku (Boni) and Matawai. Surinamese Creoles, mixed people descending from African slaves and Europeans (mostly Dutch), form 15.7% of the population. Javanese make up 14% of the population, and like the East Indians, descend largely from workers contracted from the island of Java in the former Dutch East Indies (modern Indonesia).[87] 13.4% of the population identifies as being of mixed ethnic heritage. Chinese, originating from 19th-century indentured workers and some recent migration, make up 7.3% of the population.

Other groups include Lebanese, primarily Maronites, and Jews of Sephardic and Ashkenazi origin, whose center of population was Jodensavanne. Various indigenous peoples make up 3.7% of the population, with the main groups being the Akurio, Arawak, Kalina (Caribs), Tiriyó and Wayana. They live mainly in the districts of Paramaribo, Wanica, Para, Marowijne and Sipaliwini.[citation needed] A small but influential number of Europeans remain in the country, comprising about 1% of the population. They are descended mostly from Dutch 19th-century immigrant farmers, known as "Boeroes" (derived from boer, the Dutch word for "farmer"), and to a lesser degree other European groups, such as Portuguese. Many Boeroes left after independence in 1975.

More recently Suriname has seen a new wave of immigrants, namely Brazilians and Chinese (many of them laborers mining for gold); most do not have legal status.[88]

The vast majority of Suriname's inhabitants (about 90%) live in Paramaribo or on the coast.

Emigration

 
Immigrants from India

The option to choose between Surinamese or Dutch citizenship in the years leading up to Suriname's independence in 1975 led to a mass migration to the Netherlands. This migration continued in the period immediately after independence and during military rule in the 1980s and for largely economic reasons extended throughout the 1990s. The Surinamese community in the Netherlands numbered 350,300 as of 2013 (including children and grandchildren of Suriname migrants born in the Netherlands), compared to approximately 566,000 Surinamese in Suriname itself.[14]

According to the International Organization for Migration, around 272,600 people from Suriname lived in other countries in the late 2010s, in particular in the Netherlands (c. 192,000), France (c. 25,000, most of them in French Guiana),[c] the United States (c. 15,000), Guyana (c. 5,000), Aruba (c. 1,500), and Canada (c. 1,000).[89]

Religion

Religion in Suriname, 2020[90]
Religion Percent
Christianity
52.3%
Hinduism
18.8%
Islam
14.3%
Folk religions
5.6%
Other religions
2.8%
Unaffiliated
6.2%
 
Synagogue and mosque adjacent to each other in Paramaribo

Suriname's religious makeup is heterogeneous and reflective of the country's multicultural character.[91][85] According to Pew research from 2012, Christians are the largest religious community, at slightly over half the population (51.6%), followed by Hindus (19.8%) and Muslims (15.2%); other religious minorities include adherents of various folk traditions (5.3%), Buddhists (<1%), Jews (<1%), practitioners of other faiths (1.8%), and unaffiliated (5.4%).[90][92]

According to the 2020 census, 52.3% of Surinamese were Christians; 26.7% were Protestants (11.18% Pentecostal, 11.16% Moravian, 0.7% Reformed (including Remonstrants), and 4.4% other Protestant denominations), while 21.6% were Catholics.[93] Hindus are the second largest religious group in Suriname, comprising nearly one-fifth of the population (18.8% in 2020),[90] the third largest proportion of any country in the Western Hemisphere, after Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago, both of which also have large proportions of Indians. Likewise, almost all practitioners of Hinduism are found among the Indo-Surinamese population. Muslims constitute 14.3% of the population, the highest proportion of Muslims in the Americas; they are largely of Javanese or Indian descent.[93] Folk religions are practiced by 5.6% of the population and include Winti, an Afro-American religion practiced mostly by those of Maroon ancestry; Javanism (0.8%),[93] a syncretic faith found among some Javanese Surinamese; and various indigenous folk traditions that are often incorporated into one of the larger religions (usually Christianity). In the 2020 census, 6.2% of the population declared they had "no religion", while a further 1.9% adhere to "other religions".[90]

Languages

 
Butcher in the Central Market in Paramaribo with signs written in Dutch

Suriname has roughly 14 local languages, but Dutch (Nederlands) is the sole official language and is the language used in education, government, business, and the media.[14] Over 60% of the population are native speakers of Dutch[94] and around 20%-30% speak it as a second language. In 2004, Suriname became an associate member of the Dutch Language Union.[95]

Suriname is the only Dutch-speaking sovereign country outside of Europe, and the only independent nation in the Americas in which Dutch is spoken by a majority of the population. Suriname and English-speaking Guyana are the only countries in South America where a Romance language does not predominate.

In Paramaribo, Dutch is the main home language in two thirds of the households.[4] The recognition of "Surinaams-Nederlands" ("Surinamese Dutch") as a national dialect equal to "Nederlands-Nederlands" ("Dutch Dutch") and "Vlaams-Nederlands" ("Flemish Dutch") was expressed in 2009 by the publication of the Woordenboek Surinaams Nederlands (Surinamese–Dutch Dictionary).[96] It is the most commonly spoken language in urban areas; only in the interior of Suriname (namely parts of Sipaliwini and Brokopondo) is Dutch seldom spoken.

Sranan Tongo, a local English-based creole language, is the most widely used vernacular language in daily life and business. Together with Dutch, it is considered to be the one of the two principal languages of Surinamese diglossia. Both are further influenced by other spoken languages which are spoken primarily within ethnic communities. Sranan Tongo is often used interchangeably with Dutch depending on the formality of the setting; Dutch is seen as a prestige dialect and Sranan Tongo the common vernacular.[97]

Sarnami, a fusion of Bhojpuri and Awadhi, is the third-most used language. It is primarily spoken by the descendants of Indian indentured labourers from the former British India.

The six Maroon languages of Suriname are also considered English-based creole languages, and include Saramaccan, Aukan, Aluku, Paramaccan, Matawai and Kwinti. Aluku, Paramaccan and Kwinti are so mutually intelligible with Aukan that they can be considered dialects of the Aukan language. The same can be said about Matawai, which is mutually intelligible with Saramaka.

Javanese is used by the descendants of the Javanese people, which were indentured laborers sent from the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia).

Amerindian languages include Akurio, Arawak-Lokono, Carib-Kari'nja, Sikiana-Kashuyana, Tiro-Tiriyó, Waiwai, Warao, and Wayana.

Hakka and Cantonese are spoken by the descendants of the Chinese indentured labourers. Mandarin is spoken by the recent wave of Chinese immigrants.

English, Guyanese English Creole, Portuguese (both European and Brazilian dialects), Spanish, French and French Guianese Creole are spoken at areas near the country's borders where there are many migrants from neighboring countries speaking their respective languages.

Largest cities

The national capital, Paramaribo, is by far the dominant urban area, accounting for nearly half of Suriname's population and most of its urban residents; indeed, its population is greater than the next nine largest cities combined. Most municipalities are located within the capital's metropolitan area, or along the densely populated coastline.

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Suriname
Rank Name District Pop.
 
Paramaribo
 
Lelydorp
1 Paramaribo Paramaribo 223 757  
Nieuw Nickerie
 
Moengo
2 Lelydorp Wanica 18 223
3 Nieuw Nickerie Nickerie 13 143
4 Moengo Marowijne 7 074
5 Nieuw Amsterdam Commewijne 4 935
6 Mariënburg Commewijne 4 427
7 Wageningen Nickerie 4 145
8 Albina Marowijne 3 985
9 Groningen Saramacca 3 216
10 Brownsweg Brokopondo 2 696

Culture

Owing to the country's multicultural heritage, Suriname celebrates a variety of distinct ethnic and religious festivals.

National holidays

There are several Hindu and Islamic national holidays like Diwali (deepavali), Phagwa and Eid ul-Fitr and Eid-ul-adha. These holidays do not have fixed dates on the Gregorian calendar, as they are based on the Hindu and Islamic calendars, respectively. As of 2020, Eid-ul-adha is a national holiday, and equal to a Sunday.[99]

There are several holidays which are unique to Suriname. These include the Indian, Javanese and Chinese arrival days. They celebrate the arrival of the first ships with their respective immigrants.

New Year's Eve

 
Pagara (red firecracker ribbons)

New Year's Eve in Suriname is called Oud jaar, Owru Yari, or "old year". Firecrackers called pagaras which have long ribbons attached are detonated at midnight.[100]

Sports

The major sports in Suriname are football, basketball, and volleyball. The Suriname Olympic Committee is the national governing body for sports in Suriname. The major mind sports are chess, draughts, bridge and troefcall.

Many Suriname-born football players and Dutch-born football players of Surinamese descent have turned out to play for the Dutch national team, including Gerald Vanenburg, Ruud Gullit, Frank Rijkaard, Edgar Davids, Clarence Seedorf, Patrick Kluivert, Aron Winter, Georginio Wijnaldum, Virgil van Dijk and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink. In 1999, Humphrey Mijnals, who played for both Suriname and the Netherlands, was elected Surinamese footballer of the century.[101] Another famous player is André Kamperveen, who captained Suriname in the 1940s and was the first Surinamese to play professionally in the Netherlands.

Swimmer Anthony Nesty is the only Olympic medalist for Suriname. He won gold in the 100-meter butterfly at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul and he won bronze in the same discipline at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. Originally from Trinidad and Tobago, he now lives in Gainesville, Florida, and is the coach of the University of Florida, mainly coaching distance swimmers.

The most famous international track & field athlete from Suriname is Letitia Vriesde, who won a silver medal at the 1995 World Championships behind Ana Quirot in the 800 metres, the first medal won by a South American female athlete in World Championship competition. In addition, she also won a bronze medal at the 2001 World Championships and won several medals in the 800 and 1500 metres at the Pan-American Games and Central American and Caribbean Games. Tommy Asinga also received acclaim for winning a bronze medal in the 800 metres at the 1991 Pan American Games.

Cricket is popular in Suriname to some extent, influenced by its popularity in the Netherlands and in neighbouring Guyana. The Surinaamse Cricket Bond is an associate member of the International Cricket Council (ICC). Suriname and Argentina were the only ICC associate members in South America when ICC had a three tiered membership, although Guyana is represented on the West Indies Cricket Board, a full member. The national cricket team was ranked 47th in the world and sixth in the ICC Americas region as of June 2014, and competes in the World Cricket League (WCL) and ICC Americas Championship. Iris Jharap, born in Paramaribo, played women's One Day International matches for the Dutch national side, the only Surinamese to do so.[102]

In the sport of badminton, the local heroes are Virgil Soeroredjo and Mitchel Wongsodikromo and also Crystal Leefmans. All winning medals for Suriname at the Carebaco Caribbean Championships, the Central American and Caribbean Games (CACSO Games)[103] and also at the South American Games, better known as the ODESUR Games. Virgil Soeroredjo also participated for Suriname at the 2012 London Summer Olympics, only the second badminton player, after Oscar Brandon, for Suriname to achieve this.[104] National Champion Sören Opti became the third Surinamese badminton player to participate at the Summer Olympics in 2016.

Multiple time K-1 kickboxing world champions Ernesto Hoost and Remy Bonjasky were born in Suriname or are of Surinamese descent. Other kickboxing world champions include Rayen Simson, Melvin Manhoef, Tyrone Spong, Jairzinho Rozenstruik, Regian Eersel and Donovan Wisse.

Suriname also has a national korfball team, with korfball being a Dutch sport. Vinkensport is also practised.

In 2016, the Sports Hall of Fame Suriname was established in the building of the Suriname Olympic Committee and is dedicated to the achievements of the Surinamese sporters.[105]

Transportation

Road

Suriname, along with neighboring Guyana, is one of only two countries on the mainland South American continent that drive on the left, although many vehicles are left-hand-drive as well as right-hand-drive.[106] One explanation for this practice is that at the time of its colonization of Suriname, the Netherlands itself used left-hand traffic, also introducing the practice in the Dutch East Indies, now Indonesia.[107] Another is that Suriname was first colonized by the British, and for practical reasons, this was not changed when it came under Dutch administration.[108] Although the Netherlands converted to driving to the right at the end of the 18th century,[107] Suriname did not. As of 2003, Suriname had 4303 km (2674 miles) of roads, of which 1119 km (695 miles) are paved.[109]

Air

The country has 55 mostly small airports,[110] of which only six are paved. The only international airport that supports large jet aircraft is Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport.

Airlines with departures from Suriname:

Airlines with arrivals in Suriname:

Other national companies with an air operator certification:

  • Aero Club Suriname (ACS) – General Aviation Aeroclub
  • Coronie Aero Farmers (CAF) – Agriculture Cropdusting
  • Eagle Air Services (EAS) – Agriculture Cropdusting
  • ERK Farms (ERK) – Agriculture Cropdusting
  • Overeem Air Service (OAS) – General Aviation Charters
  • Pegasus Air Service (PAS) – Helicopter Charters
  • Suriname Air Force / Surinaamse Luchtmacht (SAF / LUMA) – Military Aviation Surinam Air Force
  • Surinam Sky Farmers (SSF) – Agriculture Cropdusting
  • Surinaamse Medische Zendings Vliegdienst (MAF – Mission Aviation Fellowship) – General Aviation Missionary
  • Vortex Aviation Suriname (VAS) – General Aviation Maintenance & Flightschool

Health

The Global Burden of Disease Study provides an on-line data source for analyzing updated estimates of health for 359 diseases and injuries and 84 risk factors from 1990 to 2017 in most of the world's countries.[112] Comparing Suriname with other Caribbean nations show that in 2017 the age-standardized death rate for all causes was 793 (males 969, females 641) per 100,000, far below the 1219 of Haiti, somewhat below the 944 of Guyana but considerably above the 424 of Bermuda. In 1990 the death rate was 960 per 100,000. Life expectancy in 2017 was 72 years (males 69, females 75). The death rate for children < 5 years was 581 per 100,000 compared to 1308 in Haiti and 102 in Bermuda. In 1990 and 2017, leading causes of age-standardized death rates were cardiovascular disease, cancer and diabetes/chronic kidney disease.

Education

Education in Suriname is compulsory until the age of 12,[113] and the nation had a net primary enrollment rate of 94% in 2004.[114] Literacy is very common, particularly among men.[114] The main university in the country is the Anton de Kom University of Suriname.

From elementary school to high school there are 13 grades. The elementary school has six grades, middle school four grades and high school three grades. Students take a test in the end of elementary school to determine whether they will go to the MULO (secondary modern school) or a middle school of lower standards like LBO.

Students going from the second grade of middle school to the third grade have to choose between the business or science courses. This will determine what their major subjects will be. In order to go on to study math and physics, the student must have a total of 12 points. If the student has fewer points, he/she will go into the business courses or fail the grade.[citation needed]

Media

Traditionally, De Ware Tijd was the major newspaper of the country, but since the '90s Times of Suriname, De West and Dagblad Suriname have also been well-read newspapers; all publish primarily in Dutch.[115]

Suriname has twenty-four radio stations, most of them also broadcast through the Internet. There are twelve television sources: ABC (Ch. 4–1, 2), RBN (Ch. 5–1, 2), Rasonic TV (Ch. 7), STVS (Ch. 8–1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6), Apintie (Ch. 10–1), ATV (Ch. 12–1, 2, 3, 4), Radika (Ch. 14), SCCN (Ch. 17–1, 2, 3), Pipel TV (Ch. 18–1, 2), Trishul (Ch. 20–1, 2, 3, 4), Garuda (Ch. 23–1, 2, 3), Sangeetmala (Ch. 26), Ch. 30, Ch. 31, Ch.32, Ch.38, SCTV (Ch. 45). Also listened to is mArt, a broadcaster from Amsterdam founded by people from Suriname. Kondreman is one of the popular cartoons in Suriname.

There are also three major news sites: Starnieuws, Suriname Herald, and GFC Nieuws.

In 2012, Suriname was ranked joint 22nd with Japan in the worldwide Press Freedom Index by the organization Reporters Without Borders.[116] This was ahead of the US (47th), the UK (28th), and France (38th).

Tourism

 
Central Suriname Nature Reserve seen from the Voltzberg

Most tourists visit Suriname for the biodiversity of the Amazonian rain forests in the south of the country, which are noted for their flora and fauna. The Central Suriname Nature Reserve is the biggest and one of the most popular reserves, along with the Brownsberg Nature Park which overlooks the Brokopondo Reservoir, one of the largest man-made lakes in the world. In 2008, the Berg en Dal Eco & Cultural Resort opened in Brokopondo.[117] Tonka Island in the reservoir is home to a rustic eco-tourism project run by the Saramaccaner Maroons.[118] Pangi wraps and bowls made of calabashes are the two main products manufactured for tourists. The Maroons have learned that colorful and ornate pangis are popular with tourists.[119] Other popular decorative souvenirs are hand-carved purple-hardwood made into bowls, plates, canes, wooden boxes, and wall decors.

There are also many waterfalls throughout the country. Raleighvallen, or Raleigh Falls, is a 56,000-hectare (140,000-acre) nature reserve on the Coppename River, rich in bird life. Also are the Blanche Marie Falls on the Nickerie River and the Wonotobo Falls. Tafelberg Mountain in the centre of the country is surrounded by its own reserve – the Tafelberg Nature Reserve – around the source of the Saramacca River, as is the Voltzberg Nature Reserve further north on the Coppename River at Raleighvallen. In the interior are many Maroon and Amerindian villages, many of which have their own reserves that are generally open to visitors.

Suriname is one of the few countries in the world where at least one of each biome that the state possesses has been declared a wildlife reserve. Around 30% of the total land area of Suriname is protected by law as reserves.

Other attractions include plantations such as Laarwijk, which is situated along the Suriname River. This plantation can be reached only by boat via Domburg, in the north central Wanica District of Suriname.

Crime rates continue to rise in Paramaribo and armed robberies are not uncommon. According to the current U.S. Department of State Travel Advisory at the date of the 2018 report's publication, Suriname has been assessed as Level 1: exercise normal precautions.[120]

Landmarks

 

The Jules Wijdenbosch Bridge is a bridge over the river Suriname between Paramaribo and Meerzorg in the Commewijne district. The bridge was built during the tenure of President Jules Albert Wijdenbosch (1996–2000) and was completed in 2000. The bridge is 52 metres (171 ft) high, and 1,504 metres (4,934 ft) long. It connects Paramaribo with Commewijne, a connection which previously could only be made by ferry. The purpose of the bridge was to facilitate and promote the development of the eastern part of Suriname. The bridge consists of two lanes (one lane each way) and is not accessible to pedestrians.

The construction of the Sts. Peter and Paul Cathedral started on 13 January 1883. Before it became a cathedral it was a theatre. The theatre was built in 1809 and burned down in 1820.

Suriname is one of the few countries in the world where a synagogue is located next to a mosque.[121] The two buildings are located next to each other in the centre of Paramaribo and have been known to share a parking facility during their respective religious rites, should they happen to coincide with one another.

A relatively new landmark is the Hindu Arya Diwaker temple in the Johan Adolf Pengelstraat in Wanica, Paramaribo, which was inaugurated in 2001. A special characteristic of the temple is that it does not have images of the Hindu divinities, as they are forbidden in the Arya Samaj, the Hindu movement to which the people who built the temple belong. Instead, the building is covered by many texts derived from the Vedas and other Hindu scriptures. The beautiful architecture makes the temple a tourist attraction.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Both French Guiana and Falkland Islands are less extensive and populous, but they are an overseas department and region of France and an overseas territory of the United Kingdom respectively.
  2. ^ Suriname has been carbon negative since at least 2014.
  3. ^ The International Organization for Migration made a confusion regarding the number of Surinamese migrants living in French Guiana. Their number is already included in the number for France (24,753 at the time of writing), as can be seen here: données complémentaires.

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Further reading

* Box, Ben, Footprint Focus Guide: Guyana, Guyane & Suriname, (Footprint Travel Guides, 2011)
  • Briggs, Philip, "Suriname, 2nd Ed.", (Bradt Guides, 2020)
  • Counter, S. Allen and David L. Evans, I Sought My Brother: An Afro-American Reunion, Cambridge: MIT Press, 1981
  • Dew, Edward M., The Trouble in Suriname, 1975–93, (Greenwood Press, 1994)
  • Gimlette, John, Wild Coast: Travels on South America's Untamed Edge (Profile Books, 2011)
  • McCarthy Sr., Terrence J., A Journey into Another World: Sojourn in Suriname, (Wheatmark Inc., 2010)
  • Westoll, Adam, Surinam, (Old Street Publishing, 2009)

External links

Websites of the government, President and National Assembly
  • (in Dutch) Website of the President of the Republic of Suriname 27 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • (in Dutch) Website of the Government of the Republic of Suriname
  • (in Dutch) Website of the National Assembly of the Republic of Suriname

suriname, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, surname, coordinates, ʊər, ɑː, listen, officially, republic, dutch, republiek, reːpyˌblik, ˌsyːriˈnaːmə, country, northern, south, america, bordered, atlantic, ocean, north, french, guiana, east, guyana, w. For other uses see Suriname disambiguation Not to be confused with Surname Coordinates 4 N 56 W 4 N 56 W 4 56 Suriname ˈ s ʊer ɪ n ae m n ɑː m listen officially the Republic of Suriname Dutch Republiek Suriname reːpyˌblik ˌsyːriˈnaːme is a country in northern South America It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean to the north French Guiana to the east Guyana to the west and Brazil to the south At just under 165 000 square kilometers 64 000 square miles it is the smallest sovereign state in South America a Republic of SurinameRepubliek Suriname Dutch Flag Coat of armsMotto Justitia Pietas Fides Latin Gerechtigheid Vroomheid Vertrouwen Dutch Justice Piety Trust Anthem God zij met ons Suriname Dutch God be with our Suriname source source track track track Political map showing the districts and borders of the Republic of SurinameCapitaland largest cityParamaribo5 50 N 55 10 W 5 833 N 55 167 W 5 833 55 167Official languagesDutchRecognised regional languages8 indigenous languages AkurioArawak LokonoCarib Kari njaSikiana KashuyanaTiro TiriyoWaiwaiWaraoWayanaLingua francaDutch and Sranan TongoOther languages13 languages Sarnami HindustaniNdyukaSaramaccanMatawaiAlukuParamaccanKwintiJavaneseChineseEnglishFrenchPortugueseSpanishEthnic groups 2012 1 2 3 4 5 6 27 4 Indian21 7 Maroon Bushinengue15 7 Creole13 7 Javanese13 4 Multiracial3 8 Indigenous0 3 European1 9 OthersReligion 4 5 52 3 Christianity18 8 Hinduism14 3 Islam6 2 No religion5 6 Folk religions2 8 OthersDemonym s SurinameseGovernmentUnitary assembly independent republic PresidentChan Santokhi Vice PresidentRonnie Brunswijk National Assembly ChairmanMarinus Bee High Court of Justice PresidentIwan Rasoelbaks acting LegislatureNational AssemblyIndependence Constituent country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands15 December 1954 Independence from the Kingdom of the Netherlands25 November 1975Area Total163 821 km2 63 252 sq mi 90th Water 1 1Population 2022 estimate632 638 7 170th Density3 9 km2 10 1 sq mi 231st GDP PPP 2022 estimate Total 10 707 billion 8 Per capita 17 350 8 GDP nominal 2022 estimate Total 3 011 billion 8 Per capita 4 880 8 HDI 2021 0 730 9 high 99thCurrencySurinamese dollar SRD Time zoneUTC 3 SRT Date formatdd mm yyyyDriving sideleftCalling code 597ISO 3166 codeSRInternet TLD srIt has a population of approximately 612 985 11 12 dominated by descendants from the slaves and labourers brought in from Africa and Asia by the Dutch Empire and Republic Most of the people live by the country s north coast in and around its capital and largest city Paramaribo It is also one of the least densely populated countries on Earth Situated slightly north of the equator Suriname is a tropical country dominated by rainforests Its extensive tree cover is vital to the country s efforts to mitigate climate change and maintain carbon negativity 13 b A developing country with a relatively high level of human development Suriname s economy is heavily dependent on its abundant natural resources namely bauxite gold petroleum and agricultural products Suriname was inhabited as early as the fourth millennium BC by various indigenous peoples including the Arawaks Caribs and Wayana Europeans arrived in the 16th century with the Dutch establishing control over much of the country s current territory by the late 17th century During the Dutch colonial period Suriname was a lucrative source of sugar its plantation economy driven by African slave labour and after abolition of slavery in 1863 by indentured servants from Asia predominantly from British India as well as the Dutch East Indies In 1954 Suriname became one of the constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands On 25 November 1975 it left the Kingdom to become an independent state In contrast to Indonesia s earlier war for independence from the Netherlands the path toward Suriname s independence was an initiative of the then left wing Dutch government Suriname continues to maintain close diplomatic economic and cultural ties with the Netherlands Suriname is considered a culturally Caribbean country and is a member of the Caribbean Community CARICOM It is the only sovereign nation outside of Europe where Dutch is the official and prevailing language of government business media and education 14 According to research by the Dutch Language Union Dutch is the native language of 60 of Surinamese 15 Sranan Tongo an English based creole language is a widely used lingua franca Suriname is part of several major international and intergovernmental institutions or groupings including the United Nations and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Colonial period 2 2 Abolition of slavery 2 3 Decolonization 2 4 Independence 2 5 1980 military coup 2 6 Civil war elections and constitution 2 7 21st century 3 Politics 3 1 Foreign relations 3 2 Military 3 3 Administrative divisions 4 Geography 4 1 Borders 4 2 Climate 4 3 Biodiversity and conservation 5 Economy 6 Demographics 6 1 Ethnicity 6 2 Emigration 6 3 Religion 6 4 Languages 6 5 Largest cities 7 Culture 7 1 National holidays 7 1 1 New Year s Eve 7 2 Sports 8 Transportation 8 1 Road 8 2 Air 9 Health 10 Education 11 Media 12 Tourism 12 1 Landmarks 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology EditThe name Suriname may derive from an indigenous people called Surinen who inhabited the area at the time of European contact 16 The suffix ame common in Surinamese river and place names see also the Coppename River may come from aima or eima meaning river or creek mouth in Lokono an Arawak language spoken in the country 17 The earliest European sources give variants of Suriname as the name of the river on which colonies were eventually founded Lawrence Kemys wrote in his Relation of the Second Voyage to Guiana of passing a river called Shurinama as he travelled along the coast In 1598 a fleet of three Dutch ships visiting the Wild Coast mention passing the river Surinamo In 1617 a Dutch notary spelled the name of the river on which a Dutch trading post had existed three years earlier as Surrenant 18 British settlers who in 1630 founded the first European colony at Marshall s Creek along the Suriname River spelled the name as Surinam this would long remain the standard spelling in English 19 The Dutch navigator David Pietersz de Vries wrote of travelling up the Sername river in 1634 until he encountered the English colony there the terminal vowel remained in future Dutch spellings and pronunciations In 1640 a Spanish manuscript entitled General Description of All His Majesty s Dominions in America called the river Soronama In 1653 instructions given to a British fleet sailing to meet Lord Willoughby in Barbados which at the time was the seat of English colonial government in the region again spelled the name of the colony Surinam A 1663 royal charter said the region around the river was called Serrinam also Surrinam 18 As a result of the Surrinam spelling 19th century British sources offered the folk etymology Surryham saying it was the name given to the Suriname River by Lord Willoughby in the 1660s in honour of the Duke of Norfolk and Earl of Surrey when an English colony was established under a grant from King Charles II 18 This folk etymology can be found repeated in later English language sources 20 21 When the territory was taken over by the Dutch it became part of a group of colonies known as Dutch Guiana The official spelling of the country s English name was changed from Surinam to Suriname in January 1978 but Surinam can still be found in English such as Suriname s national airline Surinam Airways The older English name is reflected in the English pronunciation ˈ sj ʊer ɪ n ae m n ɑː m In Dutch the official language of Suriname the pronunciation is ˌsyriˈnaːme with the main stress on the third syllable and a schwa terminal vowel History Edit Maroon village along Suriname River 1955 Main article History of Suriname Indigenous settlement of Suriname dates back to 3 000 BC The largest tribes were the Arawak a nomadic coastal tribe that lived from hunting and fishing They were the first inhabitants in the area The Carib also settled in the area and conquered the Arawak by using their superior sailing ships They settled in Galibi Kupali Yumi meaning tree of the forefathers at the mouth of the Marowijne River While the larger Arawak and Carib tribes lived along the coast and savanna smaller groups of indigenous people lived in the inland rainforest such as the Akurio Trio Warrau and Wayana Colonial period Edit Presidential Palace of Suriname Main article Surinam English colony Main article Surinam Dutch colony Beginning in the 16th century French Spanish and English explorers visited the area A century later Dutch and English settlers established plantation colonies along the many rivers in the fertile Guiana plains The earliest documented colony in Guiana was an English settlement named Marshall s Creek along the Suriname River 19 After that there was another short lived English colony called Surinam that lasted from 1650 to 1667 Disputes arose between the Dutch and the English for control of this territory In 1667 during negotiations leading to the Treaty of Breda after the Second Anglo Dutch War the Dutch decided to keep the nascent plantation colony of Surinam they had gained from the English In return the English kept New Amsterdam the main city of the former colony of New Netherland in North America on the mid Atlantic coast The British renamed it after the Duke of York New York City In 1683 the Society of Suriname was founded by the city of Amsterdam the Van Aerssen van Sommelsdijck family and the Dutch West India Company The society was chartered to manage and defend the colony The planters of the colony relied heavily on African slaves to cultivate harvest and process the commodity crops of coffee cocoa sugar cane and cotton plantations along the rivers Planters treatment of the slaves was notoriously brutal even by the standards of the time 22 historian C R Boxer wrote that man s inhumanity to man just about reached its limits in Surinam 23 and many slaves escaped the plantations In November 1795 the Society was nationalized by the Batavian Republic and from then on the Batavian Republic and its legal successors the Kingdom of Holland and the Kingdom of the Netherlands governed the territory as a national colony barring a period of British occupation between 1799 and 1802 and between 1804 and 1816 With the help of the native South Americans living in the adjoining rain forests these runaway slaves established a new and unique culture in the interior that was highly successful in its own right They were known collectively in English as Maroons in French as Neg Marrons literally meaning brown negroes that is pale skinned negroes and in Dutch as Marrons The Maroons gradually developed several independent tribes through a process of ethnogenesis as they were made up of slaves from different African ethnicities These tribes include the Saramaka Paramaka Ndyuka or Aukan Kwinti Aluku or Boni and Matawai Waterfront houses in Paramaribo 1955 The Maroons often raided plantations to recruit new members from the slaves and capture women as well as to acquire weapons food and supplies They sometimes killed planters and their families in the raids colonists built defenses which were significant enough that they were shown on 18th century maps 24 The colonists also mounted armed campaigns against the Maroons who generally escaped through the rainforest which they knew much better than the colonists did To end hostilities in the 18th century the European colonial authorities signed several peace treaties with different tribes They granted the Maroons sovereign status and trade rights in their inland territories giving them autonomy Abolition of slavery Edit Further information Human rights in Suriname From 1861 to 1863 with the American Civil War underway and enslaved people escaping to Northern territory controlled by the Union United States President Abraham Lincoln and his administration looked abroad for places to relocate people who were freed from enslavement and who wanted to leave the United States It opened negotiations with the Dutch government regarding African American emigration to and colonization of the Dutch colony of Suriname Nothing came of the idea and the idea was dropped after 1864 25 The Netherlands abolished slavery in Suriname in 1863 under a gradual process that required slaves to work on plantations for 10 transition years for minimal pay which was considered as partial compensation for their masters After that transition period expired in 1873 most freedmen largely abandoned the plantations where they had worked for several generations in favor of the capital city Paramaribo Some of them were able to purchase the plantations they worked on especially in the district of Para and Coronie Their descendants still live on those grounds today Several plantation owners did not pay their former enslaved workers the pay they owed them for the ten years following 1863 They paid the workers with the property rights of the ground of the plantation in order to escape their debt to the workers 26 Javanese immigrants brought as contract workers from the Dutch East Indies Picture was taken between 1880 and 1900 As a plantation colony Suriname had an economy dependent on labor intensive commodity crops To make up for a shortage of labor the Dutch recruited and transported contract or indentured laborers from the Dutch East Indies modern Indonesia and India the latter through an arrangement with the British who then ruled the area In addition during the late 19th and early 20th centuries small numbers of laborers mostly men were recruited from China and the Middle East Although Suriname s population remains relatively small because of this complex colonization and exploitation it is one of the most ethnically and culturally diverse countries in the world 27 28 Decolonization Edit See also Decolonization of the Americas and Suriname in World War II During World War II on 23 November 1941 under an agreement with the Netherlands government in exile the United States sent 2 000 soldiers to Suriname to protect the bauxite mines to support the Allies war effort 29 30 In 1942 the Dutch government in exile began to review the relations between the Netherlands and its colonies in terms of the post war period 31 In 1954 Suriname became one of the constituent countries of the Kingdom of the Netherlands along with the Netherlands Antilles and the Netherlands In this construction the Netherlands retained control of its defense and foreign affairs In 1974 the local government led by the National Party of Suriname NPS whose membership was largely Creole meaning ethnically African or mixed African European started negotiations with the Dutch government leading towards full independence which was granted on 25 November 1975 A large part of Suriname s economy for the first decade following independence was fueled by foreign aid provided by the Dutch government Independence Edit Henck Arron Beatrix and Johan Ferrier on 25 November 1975 The first President of the country was Johan Ferrier the former governor with Henck Arron the then leader of the NPS as Prime Minister In the years leading up to independence nearly one third of the population of Suriname emigrated to the Netherlands amidst concern that the new country would fare worse under independence than it had as a constituent country of the Kingdom of the Netherlands Surinamese politics did degenerate into ethnic polarisation and corruption soon after independence with the NPS using Dutch aid money for partisan purposes Its leaders were accused of fraud in the 1977 elections in which Arron won a further term and the discontent was such that a large portion of the population fled to the Netherlands joining the already significant Surinamese community there 32 33 34 1980 military coup Edit Main article 1980 Surinamese coup d etat On 25 February 1980 a military coup overthrew Arron s government It was initiated by a group of 16 sergeants led by Desi Bouterse 14 Opponents of the military regime attempted counter coups in April 1980 August 1980 15 March 1981 and again on 12 March 1982 The first counter attempt was led by Fred Ormskerk 35 the second by Marxist Leninists 36 the third by Wilfred Hawker and the fourth by Surendre Rambocus Hawker escaped from prison during the fourth counter coup attempt but he was captured and summarily executed Between 2 am and 5 am on 7 December 1982 the military under Bouterse s leadership rounded up 13 prominent citizens who had criticized the military dictatorship and held them at Fort Zeelandia in Paramaribo 37 The dictatorship had all these men executed over the next three days along with Rambocus and Jiwansingh Sheombar who was also involved in the fourth counter coup attempt Civil war elections and constitution Edit The brutal civil war between the Suriname army and Maroons loyal to rebel leader Ronnie Brunswijk begun in 1986 continued and its effects further weakened Bouterse s position during the 1990s Due to the civil war more than 10 000 Surinamese mostly Maroons fled to French Guiana in the late 1980s 38 National elections were held in 1987 The National Assembly adopted a new constitution that allowed Bouterse to remain in charge of the army Dissatisfied with the government Bouterse summarily dismissed the ministers in 1990 by telephone This event became popularly known as the Telephone Coup His power began to wane after the 1991 elections At the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul Suriname became the smallest independent South American state to win its first ever Olympic medal as Anthony Nesty won gold in the 100 metre butterfly In 1999 the Netherlands tried Bouterse in absentia on drug smuggling charges He was convicted and sentenced to prison but remained in Suriname 39 The 1999 Surinamese protests occurred in 1999 21st century Edit On 19 July 2010 Bouterse returned to power when he was elected as the president of Suriname 40 Before his election in 2010 he along with 24 others had been charged with the murders of 15 prominent dissidents in the December murders However in 2012 two months before the verdict in the trial the National Assembly extended its amnesty law and provided Bouterse and the others with amnesty of these charges He was reelected on 14 July 2015 41 However Bouterse was convicted by a Surinamese court on 29 November 2019 and given a 20 year sentence for his role in the 1982 killings 42 After winning the 2020 elections 43 Chan Santokhi was the sole nomination for president of Suriname 44 On 13 July Santokhi was elected president by acclamation in an uncontested election 45 He was inaugurated on 16 July in a ceremony without public attendance due to the COVID 19 pandemic 46 In February 2023 there were heavy protests against rising living costs in the capital Paramaribo Protesters accused the government of President Chan Santokhi of corruption They stormed the National Assembly demanding the government to resign However the government condemned the protests 47 Politics Edit National Assembly Court of Justice Main article Politics of Suriname The Republic of Suriname is a representative democratic republic based on the Constitution of 1987 The legislative branch of government consists of a 51 member unicameral National Assembly simultaneously and popularly elected for a five year term In the elections held on Tuesday 25 May 2010 the Megacombinatie won 23 of the National Assembly seats followed by Nationale Front with 20 seats A much smaller number important for coalition building went to the A combinatie and to the Volksalliantie The parties held negotiations to form coalitions Elections were held on 25 May 2015 and the National Assembly again elected Desi Bouterse as president 48 The president of Suriname is elected for a five year term by a two thirds majority of the National Assembly If at least two thirds of the National Assembly cannot agree to vote for one presidential candidate a People s Assembly is formed from all National Assembly delegates and regional and municipal representatives who were elected by popular vote in the most recent national election The president may be elected by a majority of the People s Assembly called for the special election As head of government the president appoints a sixteen minister cabinet A vice president is normally elected for a five year term at the same time as the president by a simple majority in the National Assembly or People s Assembly There is no constitutional provision for removal or replacement of the president except in the case of resignation The judiciary is headed by the High Court of Justice of Suriname Supreme Court This court supervises the magistrate courts Members are appointed for life by the president in consultation with the National Assembly the State Advisory Council and the National Order of Private Attorneys Foreign relations Edit Main article Foreign relations of Suriname Due to Suriname s Dutch colonial history Suriname had a long standing special relationship with the Netherlands In 1999 Desi Bouterse was convicted and sentenced in absentia in the Netherlands to 11 years of imprisonment for drug trafficking He was the main suspect in the court case concerning the December murders the 1982 assassination of opponents of military rule in Fort Zeelandia Paramaribo He served as president between 2010 and 2020 These two cases still strain relations between the Netherlands and Suriname 49 The Dutch government stated during that time that it would maintain limited contact with the president 49 Bouterse was elected as president of Suriname in 2010 The Netherlands in July 2014 dropped Suriname as a member of its development program 50 Since 1991 the United States has maintained positive relations with Suriname The two countries work together through the Caribbean Basin Security Initiative CBSI and the U S President s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief PEPFAR Suriname also receives military funding from the U S Department of Defense 51 European Union relations and cooperation with Suriname are carried out both on a bilateral and a regional basis There are ongoing EU Community of Latin American and Caribbean States CELAC and EU CARIFORUM dialogues Suriname is party to the Cotonou Agreement the partnership agreement among the members of the African Caribbean and Pacific Group of States and the European Union 52 On 17 February 2005 the leaders of Barbados and Suriname signed the Agreement for the deepening of bilateral cooperation between the Government of Barbados and the Government of the Republic of Suriname 53 On 23 24 April 2009 both nations formed a Joint Commission in Paramaribo Suriname to improve relations and to expand into various areas of cooperation 54 They held a second meeting toward this goal on 3 4 March 2011 in Dover Barbados Their representatives reviewed issues of agriculture trade investment as well as international transport 55 In the late 2000s Suriname intensified development cooperation with other developing countries China s South South cooperation with Suriname has included a number of large scale infrastructure projects including port rehabilitation and road construction Brazil signed agreements to cooperate with Suriname in education health agriculture and energy production 56 Military Edit Main article Military of Suriname The Armed Forces of Suriname have three branches the Army the Air Force and the Navy The president of the Republic is the Supreme Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces Opperbevelhebber van de Strijdkrachten The president is assisted by the minister of defence Beneath the president and minister of defence is the commander of the armed forces Bevelhebber van de Strijdkrachten The military branches and regional military commands report to the commander After the creation of the Statute of the Kingdom of the Netherlands the Royal Netherlands Army was entrusted with the defense of Suriname while the defense of the Netherlands Antilles was the responsibility of the Royal Netherlands Navy The army set up a separate Troepenmacht in Suriname Forces in Suriname TRIS Upon independence in 1975 this force was turned into the Surinaamse Krijgsmacht SKM Surinamese Armed Forces After the 1980 overthrow of the government the SKM was rebranded as the Nationaal Leger NL National Army In 1965 the Dutch and Americans used Suriname s Coronie site for multiple Nike Apache sounding rocket launches 57 Administrative divisions Edit Main articles Districts of Suriname and Resorts of Suriname The country is divided into ten administrative districts each headed by a district commissioner appointed by the president who also has the power of dismissal Suriname is further subdivided into 62 resorts ressorten Districts of Suriname The 10 Districts of Suriname District Capital Area km2 Area Population 2012 census 58 Population Pop dens inhabitants km2 1 Brokopondo Brokopondo 7 364 4 5 15 909 2 9 2 22 Commewijne Nieuw Amsterdam 2 353 1 4 31 420 5 8 13 43 Coronie Totness 3 902 2 4 3 391 0 6 0 94 Marowijne Albina 4 627 2 8 18 294 3 4 4 05 Nickerie Nieuw Nickerie 5 353 3 3 34 233 6 3 6 46 Para Onverwacht 5 393 3 3 24 700 4 6 4 67 Paramaribo Paramaribo 182 0 1 240 924 44 5 1323 88 Saramacca Groningen 3 636 2 2 17 480 3 2 4 89 Sipaliwini none 130 567 79 7 37 065 6 8 0 310 Wanica Lelydorp 443 0 3 118 222 21 8 266 9SURINAME Paramaribo 163 820 100 0 541 638 100 0 3 3Geography EditMain article Geography of Suriname Brokopondo Reservoir surrounded by tropical rainforest The Coppename river one of many rivers in the interior Leatherback sea turtle on the beach near the village of Galibi Suriname is the smallest independent country in South America Situated on the Guiana Shield it lies mostly between latitudes 1 and 6 N and longitudes 54 and 58 W The country can be divided into two main geographic regions The northern lowland coastal area roughly above the line Albina Paranam Wageningen has been cultivated and most of the population lives here The southern part consists of tropical rainforest and sparsely inhabited savanna along the border with Brazil covering about 80 of Suriname s land surface The two main mountain ranges are the Bakhuys Mountains and the Van Asch Van Wijck Mountains Julianatop is the highest mountain in the country at 1 286 metres 4 219 ft above sea level Other mountains include Tafelberg at 1 026 metres 3 366 ft Mount Kasikasima at 718 metres 2 356 ft Goliathberg at 358 metres 1 175 ft and Voltzberg at 240 metres 790 ft Suriname contains six terrestrial ecoregions Guayanan Highlands moist forests Guianan moist forests Paramaribo swamp forests Tepuis Guianan savanna and Guianan mangroves 59 Its forest cover is 90 2 the highest of any nation in the world The country had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 9 39 10 ranking it fifth globally out of 172 countries 60 Borders Edit Main article Borders of Suriname Border disputes Suriname is situated between French Guiana to the east and Guyana to the west The southern border is shared with Brazil and the northern border is the Atlantic coast The southernmost borders with French Guiana and Guyana are disputed by these countries along the Marowijne and Corantijn rivers respectively while a part of the disputed maritime boundary with Guyana was arbitrated by the Permanent Court of Arbitration convened under the rules set out in Annex VII of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on 20 September 2007 61 62 Climate Edit Koppen climate classification Lying two to five degrees north of the equator Suriname has a very hot and wet tropical climate and temperatures do not vary much throughout the year Average relative humidity is between 80 and 90 Its average temperature ranges from 29 to 34 C 84 to 93 F Due to the high humidity actual temperatures are distorted and may therefore feel up to 6 C 11 F hotter than the recorded temperature The year has two wet seasons from April to August and from November to February It also has two dry seasons from August to November and February to April Climate change in Suriname is leading to warmer temperatures and more extreme weather events As a relatively poor country its contributions to global climate change have been limited Because of the large forest cover the country has been running a carbon negative economy since 2014 63 Biodiversity and conservation Edit The blue poison dart frog is endemic to Suriname Main article Biodiversity in Suriname Due to the variety of habitats and temperatures biodiversity in Suriname is considered high 64 In October 2013 16 international scientists researching the ecosystems during a three week expedition in Suriname s Upper Palumeu River Watershed catalogued 1 378 species and found 60 including six frogs one snake and 11 fish that may be previously unknown species 65 66 67 68 According to the environmental non profit Conservation International which funded the expedition Suriname s ample supply of fresh water is vital to the biodiversity and healthy ecosystems of the region 69 Snakewood Brosimum guianense a tree is native to this tropical region of the Americas Customs in Suriname report that snakewood is often illegally exported to French Guiana thought to be for the crafts industry 70 On 21 March 2013 Suriname s REDD Readiness Preparation Proposal R PP 2013 was approved by the member countries of the Participants Committee of the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility FCPF 71 As in other parts of Central and South America indigenous communities have increased their activism to protect their lands and preserve habitat In March 2015 the Trio and Wayana communities presented a declaration of cooperation to the National Assembly of Suriname that announces an indigenous conservation corridor spanning 72 000 square kilometers 27 799 square miles of southern Suriname The declaration led by these indigenous communities and with the support of Conservation International CI and World Wildlife Fund WWF Guianas comprises almost half of the total area of Suriname 72 This area includes large forests and is considered essential for the country s climate resilience freshwater security and green development strategy The Central Suriname Nature Reserve has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its unspoiled forests and biodiversity There are many national parks in the country including Galibi National Reserve along the coast Brownsberg Nature Park and Eilerts de Haan Nature Park in central Suriname and the Sipaliwani Nature Reserve on the Brazilian border In all 16 of the country s land area is national parks and lakes according to the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre 73 Economy EditMain article Economy of Suriname A proportional representation of Suriname exports 2019 Suriname s democracy gained some strength after the turbulent 1990s and its economy became more diversified and less dependent on Dutch financial assistance Bauxite aluminium ore mining used to be a strong revenue source The discovery and exploitation of oil and gold has added substantially to Suriname s economic independence Agriculture especially rice and bananas remains a strong component of the economy and ecotourism is providing new economic opportunities More than 93 of Suriname s landmass consists of unspoiled rain forest with the establishment of the Central Suriname Nature Reserve in 1998 Suriname signalled its commitment to conservation of this precious resource The Central Suriname Nature Reserve became a World Heritage Site in 2000 Ministry of Finance The economy of Suriname was dominated by the bauxite industry which accounted for more than 15 of GDP and 70 of export earnings up to 2016 Other main export products include rice bananas and shrimp Suriname has recently started exploiting some of its sizeable oil 74 and gold 75 reserves About a quarter of the people work in the agricultural sector The Surinamese economy is very dependent on commerce its main trade partners being the Netherlands the United States Canada and Caribbean countries mainly Trinidad and Tobago and the islands of the former Netherlands Antilles 76 After assuming power in the fall of 1996 the Wijdenbosch government ended the structural adjustment program of the previous government claiming it was unfair to the poorer elements of society Tax revenues fell as old taxes lapsed and the government failed to implement new tax alternatives By the end of 1997 the allocation of new Dutch development funds was frozen as Surinamese Government relations with the Netherlands deteriorated Economic growth slowed in 1998 with decline in the mining construction and utility sectors Rampant government expenditures poor tax collection a bloated civil service and reduced foreign aid in 1999 contributed to the fiscal deficit estimated at 11 of GDP The government sought to cover this deficit through monetary expansion which led to a dramatic increase in inflation It takes longer on average to register a new business in Suriname than virtually any other country in the world 694 days or about 99 weeks 77 GDP 2010 est US 4 794 billion Annual growth rate real GDP 2010 est 3 5 Per capita GDP 2010 est US 9 900 Inflation 2007 6 4 Natural resources Bauxite gold oil iron ore other minerals forests hydroelectric potential fish and shrimp Agriculture Products rice bananas timber palm kernels coconuts peanuts citrus fruits and forest products Industry Types alumina oil gold fish shrimp lumber Trade Exports 2012 US 2 563 billion alumina gold crude oil lumber shrimp and fish rice bananas Major consumers US 26 1 Belgium 17 6 UAE 12 1 Canada 10 4 Guyana 6 5 France 5 6 Barbados 4 7 14 Imports 2012 US 1 782 billion capital equipment petroleum foodstuffs cotton consumer goods Major suppliers US 25 8 Netherlands 15 8 China 9 8 UAE 7 9 Antigua and Barbuda 7 3 Netherlands Antilles 5 4 Japan 4 2 14 Demographics EditMain articles Demographics of Suriname and Surinamese people This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Suriname news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The population of Suriname from 1961 to 2003 in units of 1000 The slowdown and decline in population growth 1969 1985 reflects a mass migration to the Netherlands and French Guiana Tribal communities living within the territory of Suriname In 2022 Suriname had a population of roughly 618 040 according to estimates by the United Nations 78 79 This compares to 541 638 inhabitants from the 2012 census 5 The Surinamese populace is characterized by high levels of diversity wherein no particular demographic group constitutes a majority This is a legacy of centuries of Dutch rule which entailed successive periods of forced contracted or voluntary migration by various nationalities and ethnic groups from around the world Ethnicity Edit Ethnic groups of Suriname 80 Ethnic groups percentIndian 27 4 Maroon 21 7 Creole 15 7 Javanese 14 Mixed 13 4 Chinese 7 3 Amerindian 3 8 White 1 Other 2 3 The largest ethnic group are East Indians who form over a quarter of the population 27 4 81 82 83 84 85 86 The vast majority are descendants of 19th century indentured workers from India hailing mostly from Bhojpuri speaking areas of modern Bihar Jharkhand and northeastern Uttar Pradesh Haryana and southeastern Tamil Nadu If counted as one ethnic group the Afro Surinamese are the largest community at around 37 4 however they are usually divided into two cultural ethnic groups the Creoles and the Maroons Surinamese Maroons whose ancestors are mostly runaway slaves that fled to the interior comprise 21 7 of the population they are divided into six tribes Ndyuka Aucans Saramaccans Paramaccans Kwinti Aluku Boni and Matawai Surinamese Creoles mixed people descending from African slaves and Europeans mostly Dutch form 15 7 of the population Javanese make up 14 of the population and like the East Indians descend largely from workers contracted from the island of Java in the former Dutch East Indies modern Indonesia 87 13 4 of the population identifies as being of mixed ethnic heritage Chinese originating from 19th century indentured workers and some recent migration make up 7 3 of the population Other groups include Lebanese primarily Maronites and Jews of Sephardic and Ashkenazi origin whose center of population was Jodensavanne Various indigenous peoples make up 3 7 of the population with the main groups being the Akurio Arawak Kalina Caribs Tiriyo and Wayana They live mainly in the districts of Paramaribo Wanica Para Marowijne and Sipaliwini citation needed A small but influential number of Europeans remain in the country comprising about 1 of the population They are descended mostly from Dutch 19th century immigrant farmers known as Boeroes derived from boer the Dutch word for farmer and to a lesser degree other European groups such as Portuguese Many Boeroes left after independence in 1975 More recently Suriname has seen a new wave of immigrants namely Brazilians and Chinese many of them laborers mining for gold most do not have legal status 88 The vast majority of Suriname s inhabitants about 90 live in Paramaribo or on the coast Emigration Edit Immigrants from India The option to choose between Surinamese or Dutch citizenship in the years leading up to Suriname s independence in 1975 led to a mass migration to the Netherlands This migration continued in the period immediately after independence and during military rule in the 1980s and for largely economic reasons extended throughout the 1990s The Surinamese community in the Netherlands numbered 350 300 as of 2013 update including children and grandchildren of Suriname migrants born in the Netherlands compared to approximately 566 000 Surinamese in Suriname itself 14 According to the International Organization for Migration around 272 600 people from Suriname lived in other countries in the late 2010s in particular in the Netherlands c 192 000 France c 25 000 most of them in French Guiana c the United States c 15 000 Guyana c 5 000 Aruba c 1 500 and Canada c 1 000 89 Religion Edit Main article Religion in Suriname Religion in Suriname 2020 90 Religion PercentChristianity 52 3 Hinduism 18 8 Islam 14 3 Folk religions 5 6 Other religions 2 8 Unaffiliated 6 2 Synagogue and mosque adjacent to each other in Paramaribo Suriname s religious makeup is heterogeneous and reflective of the country s multicultural character 91 85 According to Pew research from 2012 Christians are the largest religious community at slightly over half the population 51 6 followed by Hindus 19 8 and Muslims 15 2 other religious minorities include adherents of various folk traditions 5 3 Buddhists lt 1 Jews lt 1 practitioners of other faiths 1 8 and unaffiliated 5 4 90 92 According to the 2020 census 52 3 of Surinamese were Christians 26 7 were Protestants 11 18 Pentecostal 11 16 Moravian 0 7 Reformed including Remonstrants and 4 4 other Protestant denominations while 21 6 were Catholics 93 Hindus are the second largest religious group in Suriname comprising nearly one fifth of the population 18 8 in 2020 90 the third largest proportion of any country in the Western Hemisphere after Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago both of which also have large proportions of Indians Likewise almost all practitioners of Hinduism are found among the Indo Surinamese population Muslims constitute 14 3 of the population the highest proportion of Muslims in the Americas they are largely of Javanese or Indian descent 93 Folk religions are practiced by 5 6 of the population and include Winti an Afro American religion practiced mostly by those of Maroon ancestry Javanism 0 8 93 a syncretic faith found among some Javanese Surinamese and various indigenous folk traditions that are often incorporated into one of the larger religions usually Christianity In the 2020 census 6 2 of the population declared they had no religion while a further 1 9 adhere to other religions 90 Languages Edit Butcher in the Central Market in Paramaribo with signs written in Dutch Suriname has roughly 14 local languages but Dutch Nederlands is the sole official language and is the language used in education government business and the media 14 Over 60 of the population are native speakers of Dutch 94 and around 20 30 speak it as a second language In 2004 Suriname became an associate member of the Dutch Language Union 95 Suriname is the only Dutch speaking sovereign country outside of Europe and the only independent nation in the Americas in which Dutch is spoken by a majority of the population Suriname and English speaking Guyana are the only countries in South America where a Romance language does not predominate In Paramaribo Dutch is the main home language in two thirds of the households 4 The recognition of Surinaams Nederlands Surinamese Dutch as a national dialect equal to Nederlands Nederlands Dutch Dutch and Vlaams Nederlands Flemish Dutch was expressed in 2009 by the publication of the Woordenboek Surinaams Nederlands Surinamese Dutch Dictionary 96 It is the most commonly spoken language in urban areas only in the interior of Suriname namely parts of Sipaliwini and Brokopondo is Dutch seldom spoken Sranan Tongo a local English based creole language is the most widely used vernacular language in daily life and business Together with Dutch it is considered to be the one of the two principal languages of Surinamese diglossia Both are further influenced by other spoken languages which are spoken primarily within ethnic communities Sranan Tongo is often used interchangeably with Dutch depending on the formality of the setting Dutch is seen as a prestige dialect and Sranan Tongo the common vernacular 97 Sarnami a fusion of Bhojpuri and Awadhi is the third most used language It is primarily spoken by the descendants of Indian indentured labourers from the former British India The six Maroon languages of Suriname are also considered English based creole languages and include Saramaccan Aukan Aluku Paramaccan Matawai and Kwinti Aluku Paramaccan and Kwinti are so mutually intelligible with Aukan that they can be considered dialects of the Aukan language The same can be said about Matawai which is mutually intelligible with Saramaka Javanese is used by the descendants of the Javanese people which were indentured laborers sent from the Dutch East Indies now Indonesia Amerindian languages include Akurio Arawak Lokono Carib Kari nja Sikiana Kashuyana Tiro Tiriyo Waiwai Warao and Wayana Hakka and Cantonese are spoken by the descendants of the Chinese indentured labourers Mandarin is spoken by the recent wave of Chinese immigrants English Guyanese English Creole Portuguese both European and Brazilian dialects Spanish French and French Guianese Creole are spoken at areas near the country s borders where there are many migrants from neighboring countries speaking their respective languages Largest cities Edit The national capital Paramaribo is by far the dominant urban area accounting for nearly half of Suriname s population and most of its urban residents indeed its population is greater than the next nine largest cities combined Most municipalities are located within the capital s metropolitan area or along the densely populated coastline Largest cities or towns in Suriname 98 Rank Name District Pop Paramaribo Lelydorp 1 Paramaribo Paramaribo 223 757 Nieuw Nickerie Moengo2 Lelydorp Wanica 18 2233 Nieuw Nickerie Nickerie 13 1434 Moengo Marowijne 7 0745 Nieuw Amsterdam Commewijne 4 9356 Marienburg Commewijne 4 4277 Wageningen Nickerie 4 1458 Albina Marowijne 3 9859 Groningen Saramacca 3 21610 Brownsweg Brokopondo 2 696Culture EditMain article Culture of Suriname See also Roman Catholicism in Suriname Music of Suriname and Hinduism in South America Owing to the country s multicultural heritage Suriname celebrates a variety of distinct ethnic and religious festivals National holidays Edit 1 January New Year s Day 6 January Three Kings Day January World Religion Day January February Chinese New Year March varies Holi March April Good Friday March April Easter 1 May Labour Day May June Ascension day 5 June Prawas Din Indian Arrival Day 1 July Keti Koti Emancipation Day end of slavery 8 August Javanese Arrival Day 9 August Indigenous People s Day 10 October Day of the Maroons 20 October Chinese Arrival day October November Diwali 25 November Independence Day 25 December Christmas 26 December Boxing Day varies Eid ul adhaThere are several Hindu and Islamic national holidays like Diwali deepavali Phagwa and Eid ul Fitr and Eid ul adha These holidays do not have fixed dates on the Gregorian calendar as they are based on the Hindu and Islamic calendars respectively As of 2020 Eid ul adha is a national holiday and equal to a Sunday 99 There are several holidays which are unique to Suriname These include the Indian Javanese and Chinese arrival days They celebrate the arrival of the first ships with their respective immigrants New Year s Eve Edit Pagara red firecracker ribbons New Year s Eve in Suriname is called Oud jaar Owru Yari or old year Firecrackers called pagaras which have long ribbons attached are detonated at midnight 100 Sports Edit The major sports in Suriname are football basketball and volleyball The Suriname Olympic Committee is the national governing body for sports in Suriname The major mind sports are chess draughts bridge and troefcall Many Suriname born football players and Dutch born football players of Surinamese descent have turned out to play for the Dutch national team including Gerald Vanenburg Ruud Gullit Frank Rijkaard Edgar Davids Clarence Seedorf Patrick Kluivert Aron Winter Georginio Wijnaldum Virgil van Dijk and Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink In 1999 Humphrey Mijnals who played for both Suriname and the Netherlands was elected Surinamese footballer of the century 101 Another famous player is Andre Kamperveen who captained Suriname in the 1940s and was the first Surinamese to play professionally in the Netherlands Swimmer Anthony Nesty is the only Olympic medalist for Suriname He won gold in the 100 meter butterfly at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul and he won bronze in the same discipline at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona Originally from Trinidad and Tobago he now lives in Gainesville Florida and is the coach of the University of Florida mainly coaching distance swimmers The most famous international track amp field athlete from Suriname is Letitia Vriesde who won a silver medal at the 1995 World Championships behind Ana Quirot in the 800 metres the first medal won by a South American female athlete in World Championship competition In addition she also won a bronze medal at the 2001 World Championships and won several medals in the 800 and 1500 metres at the Pan American Games and Central American and Caribbean Games Tommy Asinga also received acclaim for winning a bronze medal in the 800 metres at the 1991 Pan American Games Cricket is popular in Suriname to some extent influenced by its popularity in the Netherlands and in neighbouring Guyana The Surinaamse Cricket Bond is an associate member of the International Cricket Council ICC Suriname and Argentina were the only ICC associate members in South America when ICC had a three tiered membership although Guyana is represented on the West Indies Cricket Board a full member The national cricket team was ranked 47th in the world and sixth in the ICC Americas region as of June 2014 and competes in the World Cricket League WCL and ICC Americas Championship Iris Jharap born in Paramaribo played women s One Day International matches for the Dutch national side the only Surinamese to do so 102 In the sport of badminton the local heroes are Virgil Soeroredjo and Mitchel Wongsodikromo and also Crystal Leefmans All winning medals for Suriname at the Carebaco Caribbean Championships the Central American and Caribbean Games CACSO Games 103 and also at the South American Games better known as the ODESUR Games Virgil Soeroredjo also participated for Suriname at the 2012 London Summer Olympics only the second badminton player after Oscar Brandon for Suriname to achieve this 104 National Champion Soren Opti became the third Surinamese badminton player to participate at the Summer Olympics in 2016 Multiple time K 1 kickboxing world champions Ernesto Hoost and Remy Bonjasky were born in Suriname or are of Surinamese descent Other kickboxing world champions include Rayen Simson Melvin Manhoef Tyrone Spong Jairzinho Rozenstruik Regian Eersel and Donovan Wisse Suriname also has a national korfball team with korfball being a Dutch sport Vinkensport is also practised In 2016 the Sports Hall of Fame Suriname was established in the building of the Suriname Olympic Committee and is dedicated to the achievements of the Surinamese sporters 105 Transportation EditSee also Transport in Suriname Desire Delano Bouterse Highway and East West Link Suriname Road Edit Suriname along with neighboring Guyana is one of only two countries on the mainland South American continent that drive on the left although many vehicles are left hand drive as well as right hand drive 106 One explanation for this practice is that at the time of its colonization of Suriname the Netherlands itself used left hand traffic also introducing the practice in the Dutch East Indies now Indonesia 107 Another is that Suriname was first colonized by the British and for practical reasons this was not changed when it came under Dutch administration 108 Although the Netherlands converted to driving to the right at the end of the 18th century 107 Suriname did not As of 2003 Suriname had 4303 km 2674 miles of roads of which 1119 km 695 miles are paved 109 Air Edit The country has 55 mostly small airports 110 of which only six are paved The only international airport that supports large jet aircraft is Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport Airlines with departures from Suriname American Airlines 111 Blue Wing Airlines Gum Air Fly All Ways Surinam Airways SLM Airlines with arrivals in Suriname Caribbean Airlines Trinidad amp Tobago KLM Netherlands Gol Transportes Aereos Brazil Copa Airlines Panama Tui Netherlands Fly All Ways Curacao Cuba Havana Santiago de Cuba Surinam Airways SLM Aruba Brazil Belem Curacao Guyana Georgetown Netherlands Amsterdam Trinidad amp Tobago Port of Spain amp USA Miami Other national companies with an air operator certification Aero Club Suriname ACS General Aviation Aeroclub Coronie Aero Farmers CAF Agriculture Cropdusting Eagle Air Services EAS Agriculture Cropdusting ERK Farms ERK Agriculture Cropdusting Overeem Air Service OAS General Aviation Charters Pegasus Air Service PAS Helicopter Charters Suriname Air Force Surinaamse Luchtmacht SAF LUMA Military Aviation Surinam Air Force Surinam Sky Farmers SSF Agriculture Cropdusting Surinaamse Medische Zendings Vliegdienst MAF Mission Aviation Fellowship General Aviation Missionary Vortex Aviation Suriname VAS General Aviation Maintenance amp FlightschoolHealth EditMain article Health in Suriname The Global Burden of Disease Study provides an on line data source for analyzing updated estimates of health for 359 diseases and injuries and 84 risk factors from 1990 to 2017 in most of the world s countries 112 Comparing Suriname with other Caribbean nations show that in 2017 the age standardized death rate for all causes was 793 males 969 females 641 per 100 000 far below the 1219 of Haiti somewhat below the 944 of Guyana but considerably above the 424 of Bermuda In 1990 the death rate was 960 per 100 000 Life expectancy in 2017 was 72 years males 69 females 75 The death rate for children lt 5 years was 581 per 100 000 compared to 1308 in Haiti and 102 in Bermuda In 1990 and 2017 leading causes of age standardized death rates were cardiovascular disease cancer and diabetes chronic kidney disease Education EditMain article Education in Suriname Education in Suriname is compulsory until the age of 12 113 and the nation had a net primary enrollment rate of 94 in 2004 114 Literacy is very common particularly among men 114 The main university in the country is the Anton de Kom University of Suriname From elementary school to high school there are 13 grades The elementary school has six grades middle school four grades and high school three grades Students take a test in the end of elementary school to determine whether they will go to the MULO secondary modern school or a middle school of lower standards like LBO Students going from the second grade of middle school to the third grade have to choose between the business or science courses This will determine what their major subjects will be In order to go on to study math and physics the student must have a total of 12 points If the student has fewer points he she will go into the business courses or fail the grade citation needed Media EditTraditionally De Ware Tijd was the major newspaper of the country but since the 90s Times of Suriname De West and Dagblad Suriname have also been well read newspapers all publish primarily in Dutch 115 Suriname has twenty four radio stations most of them also broadcast through the Internet There are twelve television sources ABC Ch 4 1 2 RBN Ch 5 1 2 Rasonic TV Ch 7 STVS Ch 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 Apintie Ch 10 1 ATV Ch 12 1 2 3 4 Radika Ch 14 SCCN Ch 17 1 2 3 Pipel TV Ch 18 1 2 Trishul Ch 20 1 2 3 4 Garuda Ch 23 1 2 3 Sangeetmala Ch 26 Ch 30 Ch 31 Ch 32 Ch 38 SCTV Ch 45 Also listened to is mArt a broadcaster from Amsterdam founded by people from Suriname Kondreman is one of the popular cartoons in Suriname There are also three major news sites Starnieuws Suriname Herald and GFC Nieuws In 2012 Suriname was ranked joint 22nd with Japan in the worldwide Press Freedom Index by the organization Reporters Without Borders 116 This was ahead of the US 47th the UK 28th and France 38th Tourism Edit Central Suriname Nature Reserve seen from the Voltzberg Most tourists visit Suriname for the biodiversity of the Amazonian rain forests in the south of the country which are noted for their flora and fauna The Central Suriname Nature Reserve is the biggest and one of the most popular reserves along with the Brownsberg Nature Park which overlooks the Brokopondo Reservoir one of the largest man made lakes in the world In 2008 the Berg en Dal Eco amp Cultural Resort opened in Brokopondo 117 Tonka Island in the reservoir is home to a rustic eco tourism project run by the Saramaccaner Maroons 118 Pangi wraps and bowls made of calabashes are the two main products manufactured for tourists The Maroons have learned that colorful and ornate pangis are popular with tourists 119 Other popular decorative souvenirs are hand carved purple hardwood made into bowls plates canes wooden boxes and wall decors There are also many waterfalls throughout the country Raleighvallen or Raleigh Falls is a 56 000 hectare 140 000 acre nature reserve on the Coppename River rich in bird life Also are the Blanche Marie Falls on the Nickerie River and the Wonotobo Falls Tafelberg Mountain in the centre of the country is surrounded by its own reserve the Tafelberg Nature Reserve around the source of the Saramacca River as is the Voltzberg Nature Reserve further north on the Coppename River at Raleighvallen In the interior are many Maroon and Amerindian villages many of which have their own reserves that are generally open to visitors Suriname is one of the few countries in the world where at least one of each biome that the state possesses has been declared a wildlife reserve Around 30 of the total land area of Suriname is protected by law as reserves Other attractions include plantations such as Laarwijk which is situated along the Suriname River This plantation can be reached only by boat via Domburg in the north central Wanica District of Suriname Crime rates continue to rise in Paramaribo and armed robberies are not uncommon According to the current U S Department of State Travel Advisory at the date of the 2018 report s publication Suriname has been assessed as Level 1 exercise normal precautions 120 Landmarks Edit The Cathedral of St Peter and Paul in Paramaribo The Jules Wijdenbosch Bridge is a bridge over the river Suriname between Paramaribo and Meerzorg in the Commewijne district The bridge was built during the tenure of President Jules Albert Wijdenbosch 1996 2000 and was completed in 2000 The bridge is 52 metres 171 ft high and 1 504 metres 4 934 ft long It connects Paramaribo with Commewijne a connection which previously could only be made by ferry The purpose of the bridge was to facilitate and promote the development of the eastern part of Suriname The bridge consists of two lanes one lane each way and is not accessible to pedestrians The construction of the Sts Peter and Paul Cathedral started on 13 January 1883 Before it became a cathedral it was a theatre The theatre was built in 1809 and burned down in 1820 Suriname is one of the few countries in the world where a synagogue is located next to a mosque 121 The two buildings are located next to each other in the centre of Paramaribo and have been known to share a parking facility during their respective religious rites should they happen to coincide with one another A relatively new landmark is the Hindu Arya Diwaker temple in the Johan Adolf Pengelstraat in Wanica Paramaribo which was inaugurated in 2001 A special characteristic of the temple is that it does not have images of the Hindu divinities as they are forbidden in the Arya Samaj the Hindu movement to which the people who built the temple belong Instead the building is covered by many texts derived from the Vedas and other Hindu scriptures The beautiful architecture makes the temple a tourist attraction See also Edit Suriname portal Caribbean portalOutline of SurinameNotes Edit Both French Guiana and Falkland Islands are less extensive and populous but they are an overseas department and region of France and an overseas territory of the United Kingdom respectively Suriname has been carbon negative since at least 2014 The International Organization for Migration made a confusion regarding the number of Surinamese migrants living in French Guiana Their number is already included in the number for France 24 753 at the time of writing as can be seen here donnees complementaires References Edit Suriname An Asian Immigrant and the Organic Creation of the Caribbean s Most Unique Fusion Culture archived from the original on 20 February 2017 retrieved 19 July 2017 Censusstatistieken 2012 PDF Algemeen Bureau voor de Statistiek in Suriname General Statistics Bureau of Suriname p 76 Archived from the original PDF on 29 June 2014 The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency cia gov 29 September 2021 a b c Algemeen Bureau voor de Statistiek Geselecteerde Census variabelen per district Census profiel PDF ABS Archived from the original PDF on 10 September 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2008 a b c Census statistieken 2012 Statistics suriname org Archived from the original on 13 November 2014 Retrieved 13 July 2014 Definitieve Resultaten Vol I Etniciteit Presentatie Evaluatie Rapport CENSUS 8 42 Suriname The World Factbook 2023 ed Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 24 September 2022 a b c d Suriname International Monetary Fund 10 October 2022 Retrieved 30 October 2022 Human Development Report 2021 2022 PDF United Nations Development Programme 8 September 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2022 GINI index World Bank Retrieved 5 December 2017 World Population Prospects 2022 population un org United Nations 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1919 1920 De Naam Suriname De West Indische Gids 1st Jaarg Tweede Deel 13 17 doi 10 1163 22134360 90001870 JSTOR 41847495 S2CID 194102071 a b Baynes Thomas Spencer 1888 Encyclopaedia Britannica A Dictionary of Arts Sciences and General Literature Volume XI Ninth Edition Popular Reprint ed In 1614 the states of Holland granted to any Dutch citizen a four years monopoly of any harbour or place of commerce which he might discover in that region Guiana The first settlement however in Suriname in 1630 was made by an Englishman whose name is still preserved by Marshall s Creek Menon P K October 1978 International Boundaries A Case Study of the Guyana Surinam Boundary The International and Comparative Law Quarterly 27 4 738 768 doi 10 1093 iclqaj 27 4 738 JSTOR 758476 Wilkie Lieutenant Colonel 1841 The United Service Journal and Naval and Military Magazine p 205 Coming from the south we pass Surinam the original name of which was Surryham so called after Lord Surry in the time of Charles II 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Travel Guides 2011 Briggs Philip Suriname 2nd Ed Bradt Guides 2020 Counter S Allen and David L Evans I Sought My Brother An Afro American Reunion Cambridge MIT Press 1981 Dew Edward M The Trouble in Suriname 1975 93 Greenwood Press 1994 Gimlette John Wild Coast Travels on South America s Untamed Edge Profile Books 2011 McCarthy Sr Terrence J A Journey into Another World Sojourn in Suriname Wheatmark Inc 2010 Westoll Adam Surinam Old Street Publishing 2009 External links EditSuriname at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Travel information from Wikivoyage Suriname The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Suriname at UCB Libraries GovPubs Suriname from the BBC News Dictionaries of Suriname languages Suriname at Curlie Wikimedia Atlas of Suriname Geographic data related to Suriname at OpenStreetMap Perry Castaneda Library Map Collection Key Development Forecasts for Suriname from International Futures Materials on Suriname in the Digital Library of the Caribbean dLOC Websites of the government President and National Assembly in Dutch Website of the President of the Republic of Suriname Archived 27 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine in Dutch Website of the Government of the Republic of Suriname in Dutch Website of the National Assembly of the Republic of Suriname Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Suriname amp oldid 1145417761, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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