/ 16 July 2006

Suriname apologises for 1986 massacre

At a ceremony in a soccer stadium, Suriname’s president on Saturday apologised for an army massacre of at least 39 unarmed civilians carried out by the military regime in 1986.

Last year the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, linked to the Organisation of American States, ordered Suriname to make the apology and pay nearly $3-million in compensation to 130 survivors of the attack, known as the Moiwana massacre.

”Wrong intentions, a faulty decision, ended in the nightmare of a mass murder on innocent, defenceless citizens, on behalf of the nation,” President Ronald Venetiaan told a crowd of hundreds gathered in a soccer stadium in the former bauxite mining town of Moengo in south-eastern Suriname.

Suriname, a former Dutch colony on the northern coast of South America, was engulfed by a civil war during the 1980s that pitted guerrillas against the military leadership.

The massacre in the community of Moiwana, an eastern village first founded by escaped slaves, was part of a crackdown on the guerrillas.

Each of the 130 survivors has been paid $13 000 as part of the court ordered compensation, Justice Minister Chandrikapersad Santokhi said on Saturday.

Suriname was also ordered to set up a $1,2-million development fund for the region and to provide assistance for refugees returning to the area.

”It does not feel very safe here … an investigation has to be carried out so people can be punished for what they did,” said Andre Ajintoena, a former village resident, to thunderous applause from the crowd.

”There may be persons here who have taken part in the Moiwana killings,” added Ajintoena, who is chairperson of Moiwana Association and lives in neighbouring French Guyana.

No suspects have been prosecuted for the massacre. – Reuters