Warning: opendir(/home/main/clients/wp-content/mu-plugins): Failed to open directory: Permission denied in /home/main/clients/wp-includes/load.php on line 981 Call Stack: 0.0001 358904 1. {main}() /home/main/clients/index.php:0 0.0002 360184 2. require('/home/main/clients/wp-blog-header.php') /home/main/clients/index.php:17 0.0003 369768 3. require_once('/home/main/clients/wp-load.php') /home/main/clients/wp-blog-header.php:13 0.0004 379792 4. require_once('/home/main/clients/wp-config.php') /home/main/clients/wp-load.php:50 0.0010 479752 5. require_once('/home/main/clients/wp-settings.php') /home/main/clients/wp-config.php:112 0.1823 29137384 6. wp_get_mu_plugins() /home/main/clients/wp-settings.php:498 0.1823 29137384 7. opendir($directory = '/home/main/clients/wp-content/mu-plugins') /home/main/clients/wp-includes/load.php:981 Warning: session_start(): Session cannot be started after headers have already been sent in /home/main/clients/wp-content/plugins/userpro/includes/class-userpro.php on line 222 Call Stack: 0.0001 358904 1. {main}() /home/main/clients/index.php:0 0.0002 360184 2. require('/home/main/clients/wp-blog-header.php') /home/main/clients/index.php:17 0.0003 369768 3. require_once('/home/main/clients/wp-load.php') /home/main/clients/wp-blog-header.php:13 0.0004 379792 4. require_once('/home/main/clients/wp-config.php') /home/main/clients/wp-load.php:50 0.0010 479752 5. require_once('/home/main/clients/wp-settings.php') /home/main/clients/wp-config.php:112 0.3719 62247384 6. do_action($hook_name = 'init') /home/main/clients/wp-settings.php:771 0.3719 62247760 7. WP_Hook->do_action($args = [0 => '']) /home/main/clients/wp-includes/plugin.php:522 0.3719 62247760 8. WP_Hook->apply_filters($value = '', $args = [0 => '']) /home/main/clients/wp-includes/class-wp-hook.php:365 0.5124 79475512 9. UserPro->init('') /home/main/clients/wp-includes/class-wp-hook.php:341 0.5124 79475512 10. session_start() /home/main/clients/wp-content/plugins/userpro/includes/class-userpro.php:222 Government in Suriname - Wilderness Explorers | Notes for Travellers

Government in Suriname

Constitutional framework

Under the 1987 constitution, legislative power is exercised by the popularly elected 51-member unicameral National Assembly, which in turn elects a president and vice president. The president, vice president, and members of the National Assembly serve five-year terms. The president is the chairman of a nonelective, military-influenced Council of State, which ensures that the government’s actions conform to the law. It has constitutional powers to annul laws passed by the National Assembly. The judicial system consists of a Court of Justice and cantonal courts. Suriname is a member of the Caribbean Court of Justice, the final court of appeal for Caribbean Community members.

Local government

Local government was established in Suriname in 1987. It is divided into distrikten (districts) and ressorten (subdistricts). Each district has a representative and an executive branch of government. The former are run by district raden (district councils), and the latter are administered by districtsbestuur (district administrations). At the subdistrict level there is only a representative branch managed by ressort raad (subdistrict councils). Both the district and subdistrict councils are elected every five years at the country’s general elections.

Political process

Universal suffrage was introduced in 1948; Surinamese citizens age 18 and older are allowed to vote. Political mobilization and party affiliation have evolved along strongly ethnic lines. South Asians, Creoles, and Javanese all have played major roles in the development of the country’s constitutional democracy. The Progressive Reform Party (Vooruitstrvende Hervormde Partij; VHP) is a leading Hindu party; the Suriname National Party (Nationale Partij Suriname; NPS) was founded by Creoles; and the Pendawa Lima (“Five Sons of King Pandu”) is a predominately Javanese party.

The Surinamese Liberation Army (SLA), a guerrilla group better known as the Jungle Commando and consisting mainly of Maroons, formed in 1986 with the intent to overthrow the standing government. In retaliation, the National Army carried out raids in Maroon villages. The killing and detaining of many Maroons resulted in the flight of many to French Guiana. After a formal peace agreement was reached in 1992, most of them returned to Suriname, where they control economic activity on their lands.

Economy

Suriname’s economy is dependent on mineral resources, mainly oil, gold, and bauxite, from which alumina (used in the smelting of aluminum metal) is made. Aside from natural resources, the chief sources of income are from agriculture and remittances, mostly from the Netherlands, French Guiana, and the United States. Suriname is a member of the Caribbean Community, an organization of Caribbean countries and dependencies.

Agriculture, forestry, and fishing

Less than 1 percent of Suriname’s land is arable, and about half of this is cultivated. Most of the farmland is on the New Coastal Plain. In this region drainage is necessary most of the year, owing to a surplus of precipitation. During dry periods evaporation exceeds precipitation, and thus irrigation is necessary.

More than half of the cultivated land in Suriname is planted with rice, the basic food staple. There are two rice harvests every year—the principal one in the spring and a second crop in the autumn. Some rice is exported, as are bananas, citrus fruits, coconuts, and palm oil. Sugar, coffee, and cocoa, formerly important export items, are produced mainly for domestic consumption.

Because more than nine-tenths of Suriname is forested, great timber resources exist, but they have not been fully exploited. Plywood and timber are exported. There is a small fishing industry, centred in Paramaribo, that exports shrimp to North America.

Resources and power

Bauxite is the leading mineral in Suriname, with mines near Paranam and Overdacht. Gold mining has grown in importance. Reserves of chromium, clay, copper, diamonds, iron ore, manganese, nickel, platinum, and tin are also found in Suriname.

The State Oil Company of Suriname (Staatsolie) produces a significant amount of oil from wells in the Tambaredjo area, from which some crude oil is exported, and production activities began at the neighbouring Calcutta field in 2006. A small refinery was established there in the 1990s. Offshore oil exploration of the Guyana-Suriname Basin, which was stalled for decades because of the maritime boundary dispute with Guyana, began again in 2008.

The Brokopondo Dam and a hydroelectric power plant on the Suriname River produce electricity for the bauxite-refining operations in Paranam. The dam impounds the 600-square-mile (1,550-square-km) W.J. van Blommestein Lake.

Manufacturing

The main industry in Suriname is the mining and processing of bauxite. There are an aluminum smelter and an alumina refinery in Paranam. Apart from the bauxite and wood-processing industries, manufacturing is limited to small import-substitution enterprises. Processed foods, clothing, cigarettes, and construction material are produced for the domestic market.

Finance, trade, and services

Local banks and insurance companies either are subsidiaries of or cooperate with foreign companies, mostly from the Netherlands and the United States. Monetary policy is controlled by the minister of finance and the president of the Central Bank of Suriname (established 1957), the bank of issue. The national currency is the Suriname dollar, which replaced the guilder in 2004.

Bauxite, alumina, and gold account for almost three-fourths of total exports. Imports consist mostly of machinery and transport equipment, fuels, food products, and chemical products. Suriname’s main trade partners are the United States, Canada, the Netherlands, and Trinidad and Tobago.

Nearly two-fifths of the population is employed in the service sector, which employs a larger proportion of the labour force than any other sector. Tourism began to develop only in the early 21st century and is centred on the country’s environmental features.