(Redirected from Desi Bouterse)
Dési Bouterse in 1985
'Désiré Delano Bouterse' of
Suriname (born
October 13,
1945) has been a military sports instructor,
coup leader, army leader and a
politician in the
Nationale Democratische Partij (NDP). He is perhaps the most controversial figure in the history of independent
Suriname.
Bouterse's name is closely bound with the
military regime that controlled Suriname from
1980 until the beginning of the
1990s. On February 25, 1980, the government of newly-independent Suriname underwent a military
coup and Bouterse became Chairman of the National Military Council. Though the Suriname Presidency was retained, Bouterse was the nation's
de facto ruler until his resignation in 1988. He served briefly as President himself for a period in
1982.
Bouterse was a leading figure in Suriname's post-independence
civil war, and is often blamed for the infamous "December murders" of
1982 and events in the Maroon (''Bosneger'') village of
Moiwana in
1986. Since then he has been accused on various occasions of involvement in illegal drug
trafficking. In July 1999 he was convicted ''
in absentia'' in the
Netherlands for
cocaine-trafficking. The Netherlands has an international warrant for his arrest, which makes it almost impossible for him to leave Suriname. Suriname cannot deliver him because he is a former head of state.
After the return of democratic government, led in succession by
Ronald Venetiaan,
Jules Wijdenbosch and Venetiaan again, Bouterse tried unsuccessfully to return to power in elections.
Although he has been convicted in the Netherlands, he has remained free in Suriname. The Suriname government has said that it is preparing a case against the perpetrators of the
December murders, to be brought before a judge. The cases are ongoing as of April 2006. Bouterse has denied any involvement in the December murders of
8 December, 1982 at
Fort Zeelandia, in which 15 prominent opponents of the military regime were shot dead. He has said that he wasn't present and that the decision was made by the commander of the battalion,
Paul Bhagwandas, who died in
1996. He did however, claim political responsibility.