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Suriname: Prosecution calls for former president to be arrested and jailed

Suriname’s Public Prosecution Service have demanded that former president and military strongman, Desi Bouterse, be jailed for 20 years for complicity in the murder of 15 men on December 8, 1982.
Acting Attorney General, Carmen Rasam, said Bouterse must be held responsible for the murders, noting that enough evidence had been provided during the trial.
Bouterse had been sentenced to 20 years in jail for his involvement in the December 1982 murders of 15 political opponents by his then-military government.
In August 2021, the Court Martial of Suriname upheld the 2019 military court ruling of a 20-year jail term on Bouterse following a trial that had been going on for several years.
In 2017, Bouterse along with 23 co-defendants had appeared in the Military Court after the Court of Justice had earlier rejected a motion to stop the trial. The former military officers and civilians had been charged with the December 8, 1982 murders of the 15 men that included journalists, military officers, union leaders, lawyers, businessmen, and university lecturers.
The prosecution had alleged that the men were arrested on the nights of December 7 and 8 and transferred to Fort Zeelandia, the then headquarters of the Surinamese National Army. They said the men were tortured and summarily executed.
Desi Bouterse, took office as president in 2010, following a democratic election, and was elected for another term in 2015.
During the trial by the court-martial, the military judge said Bouterse had acted as God and decided about life and death. But Bouterse had argued during the trial that he was not present at the fort when the men were shot. -(CMC)