NOTE 2/No Sanctification for Villains!

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WIKIPEDIA

DECEMBERMURDERS

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/December_murders

NL TIMES

HIGH COURT SENTENCES FORMER SURINAME LEADER

BOUTERSE TO 20 YEARS FOR DECEMBER MURDERS

20 DECEMBER 2023

https://nltimes.nl/2023/12/20/high-court-sentences-former-suriname-leader-bouterse-20-years-december-murders

The top court in Suriname affirmed the conviction and 20-year prison sentence against Desi Bouterse, the former president of Suriname, for his role in the December Murders. The High Court of Justice issued the final verdict in the case on Wednesday. However, the High Court did not call for Bouterse’s immediate request.

Bouterse, now 78 years of age, was not present when the verdict was read. He has always maintained his innocence. In its decision, the High Court affirmed two lower court rulings.

Bouterse, who formerly lead the military, staged a coup in February 1980 in which he deposed the Surinamese government. Nearly three years later, Bouterse’s regime rousted 15 prominent Surinamese people from their homes in the middle of the night in an operation that began on December 7, 1982.

Seen as political opponents, the 15 people were taken to Fort Zeelandia, which Bouterse used as his headquarters at the time. The victims were first tortured before being killed by soldiers. The group of victims includes union leaders, journalists, university lecturers, soldiers, attorneys, and businessmen.

Bouterse was convicted in absentia and sentenced to 20 years in prison during a court-martial procedure in 2019. The Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction and sentence in 2021.

This week, the Dutch Embassy in Suriname issued a warning to Dutch people in the country regarding the outcome of the trial. A threat analysis by Suriname’s police and intelligence offices cautioned that Bouterse’s supporters, of which there are many, could intend to endanger public safety if the former president was convicted.

The threat analysis leaked out in December, stating there were “real and very serious threats.”

END

APNEWS.COM

SURINAME’S EX-DICTATOR SENTENCED TO 20 YEARS IN PRISON 

FOR THE 1982 KILLINGS OF POLITICAL OPPONENTS

20 DECEMBER 2023

https://apnews.com/article/bouterse-sentence-suriname-killings-1982-06f6ec073ca947fc862af1beb35993e4

PARAMARIBO, Suriname (AP) — Suriname’s former dictator Desi Bouterse was sentenced on Wednesday to 20 years in prison for the murders of 15 opponents of the then-military regime in December 1982, ending a historic 16-year legal process.

Bouterse, 78, was previously sentenced in the case in 2019 and in 2021 but had appealed both decisions. The court on Wednesday upheld his conviction and the latest sentencing was seen as final with no more appeals allowed. The judge handed down 20 years given the ex-president’s age and that it was the highest sentence allowed at the time of the killings.

“We have received a gem of a verdict,” said Hugo Essed, lawyer for the victims’ relatives, adding that he can now “proudly” say there is an independent constitutional state in Suriname.

Neither Bouterse, nor his four co-suspects, who were sentenced to 15 years in prison, were present in the courtroom for the sentencing.

Bouterse’s lawyer, Irvin Kanhai, said he disagreed with the verdict and had expected an acquittal, but would go into detail at a later date. “I am going to my client now,” he told journalists.

The former president remains chair of the National Democratic Party and some fear unrest in parts of Suriname. Die-hard supporters call him “boss” and have maintained they will not accept a conviction. Bouterse has urged calm several times. Tight security measures were in place in part of the capital of Paramaribo.

Bouterse still has the option of requesting a presidential pardon, but according to Essed, the legislation in Suriname is unclear on the issue. “If a request for clemency is made, it is not expected that the Court will advise on granting it.”

Henk Kamperveen, the son of Andre Kamperveen, one of the 15 people killed, said it took a long time, but the legal process against Bouterse has finally come to an end.

“We’re not going to celebrate,” he added, saying it is not a victory for the relatives, but for the rule of law in Suriname.

Prosecutors had demanded the immediate imprisonment of Bouterse, but the judge did not back the request. “How and when (Bouterse’s imprisonment) will happen is up to the prosecution,” said Essed.

Bouterse led a bloodless coup to become dictator from 1980 to 1987 and was democratically elected president from 2010 to 2020.

He and two dozen others were accused of rounding up well-known people including lawyers, journalists and a university professor and executing them in 1982 in a colonial fortress in Paramaribo.

The former dictator has accepted “political responsibility” but insists he was not present for the killings known as the “December murders.”

The criminal trial began in 2007, a quarter-century after the events it relates to. A total of 25 suspects were initially accused in the killings. A dozen have been acquitted, six have died and five have been sentenced. Two have been convicted but are believed to have fled Suriname.

Bouterse unsuccessfully tried to push through an amnesty law after being elected in 2010. Then in 2016, he ordered Suriname’s attorney general to halt legal proceedings for alleged national security reasons. A court rejected that.

END

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