The Prague Post - Suriname votes for new government to steer oil windfall

EUR -
AED 4.176255
AFN 79.390989
ALL 98.193591
AMD 435.36026
ANG 2.034878
AOA 1043.183241
ARS 1289.770921
AUD 1.750319
AWG 2.048035
AZN 1.935451
BAM 1.956071
BBD 2.291917
BDT 138.259137
BGN 1.956071
BHD 0.427959
BIF 3378.267596
BMD 1.137007
BND 1.460202
BOB 7.844086
BRL 6.420344
BSD 1.135157
BTN 96.761393
BWP 15.237109
BYN 3.714814
BYR 22285.344582
BZD 2.280116
CAD 1.561168
CDF 3257.525981
CHF 0.934017
CLF 0.027895
CLP 1070.438163
CNY 8.191343
CNH 8.155293
COP 4741.456279
CRC 577.379917
CUC 1.137007
CUP 30.130695
CVE 110.280264
CZK 24.862484
DJF 202.137979
DKK 7.464569
DOP 67.039279
DZD 150.321806
EGP 56.718851
ERN 17.055111
ETB 153.66757
FJD 2.560308
FKP 0.840345
GBP 0.840019
GEL 3.115035
GGP 0.840345
GHS 12.542736
GIP 0.840345
GMD 81.864155
GNF 9833.361065
GTQ 8.713206
GYD 237.482871
HKD 8.905707
HNL 29.54709
HRK 7.538017
HTG 148.530559
HUF 403.944581
IDR 18472.106093
ILS 4.107979
IMP 0.840345
INR 96.87246
IQD 1487.005821
IRR 47896.435778
ISK 145.150752
JEP 0.840345
JMD 180.384968
JOD 0.806187
JPY 162.102967
KES 146.700305
KGS 99.430933
KHR 4543.628897
KMF 494.033808
KPW 1023.306628
KRW 1552.833585
KWD 0.348504
KYD 0.945931
KZT 580.570359
LAK 24524.394496
LBP 101705.977432
LKR 339.837038
LRD 227.021423
LSL 20.318012
LTL 3.357287
LVL 0.687765
LYD 6.201858
MAD 10.434144
MDL 19.682724
MGA 5075.702543
MKD 61.538518
MMK 2386.910637
MNT 4065.219049
MOP 9.154867
MRU 45.143248
MUR 51.972611
MVR 17.578193
MWK 1968.272435
MXN 21.877557
MYR 4.810707
MZN 72.666256
NAD 20.318012
NGN 1807.614101
NIO 41.775782
NOK 11.49075
NPR 154.818429
NZD 1.899555
OMR 0.437611
PAB 1.135157
PEN 4.153075
PGK 4.653644
PHP 62.956086
PKR 319.940684
PLN 4.253589
PYG 9056.253503
QAR 4.137273
RON 5.055363
RSD 117.236227
RUB 90.212487
RWF 1626.025063
SAR 4.264572
SBD 9.494884
SCR 16.278253
SDG 682.773626
SEK 10.833651
SGD 1.460716
SHP 0.893509
SLE 25.832749
SLL 23842.476427
SOS 648.689787
SRD 42.271092
STD 23533.757087
SVC 9.932375
SYP 14783.13538
SZL 20.312812
THB 36.956153
TJS 11.63491
TMT 3.985211
TND 3.39297
TOP 2.662991
TRY 44.33509
TTD 7.716068
TWD 34.07872
TZS 3061.92381
UAH 47.117922
UGX 4143.573525
USD 1.137007
UYU 47.156527
UZS 14648.027478
VES 107.841199
VND 29509.889453
VUV 137.399516
WST 3.058106
XAF 656.047806
XAG 0.033953
XAU 0.000339
XCD 3.072819
XDR 0.815913
XOF 656.047806
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.258943
ZAR 20.275514
ZMK 10234.433363
ZMW 31.045297
ZWL 366.115911
  • SCS

    -0.0600

    10.09

    -0.59%

  • NGG

    1.1600

    74.79

    +1.55%

  • BCC

    -0.7700

    86.56

    -0.89%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    21.53

    +0.28%

  • AZN

    0.4600

    70.41

    +0.65%

  • GSK

    -0.2600

    38.66

    -0.67%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    21.94

    -0.09%

  • RIO

    0.4600

    61.58

    +0.75%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    21.89

    +0.73%

  • BP

    0.1500

    29.09

    +0.52%

  • BTI

    0.6200

    45.22

    +1.37%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    12.69

    +0.39%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    10.47

    -0.67%

  • RELX

    0.4600

    55.44

    +0.83%

  • RYCEF

    0.1200

    11.32

    +1.06%

  • RBGPF

    65.0500

    65.05

    +100%

Suriname votes for new government to steer oil windfall
Suriname votes for new government to steer oil windfall / Photo: Juan BARRETO - AFP

Suriname votes for new government to steer oil windfall

Voting began Sunday in Surinamese parliamentary elections that will determine who will harness giant oil wealth to carry out a rags-to-riches transformation of the smallest country in South America.

Text size:

The tiny nation -- the only one in the Americas with Dutch as its official language -- is battling high debt, rampant inflation and poverty affecting nearly one in five of its 600,000 inhabitants.

But recent offshore crude discoveries suggest this may all be about to change.

"It will be a huge amount of income for the country," incumbent President Chan Santokhi told AFP this week. "We are now able... to do more for our people so that everyone can be part of the growth of the nation."

On Sunday, Surinamese began electing a new parliament of 51 members, who within weeks must choose a new president and vice-president for a five-year term.

Santokhi is constitutionally eligible for a second term but, with no single party in a clear lead, pollsters are not picking any favorites.

"We have laid the foundations for economic stability and we need to build on that," Defence Minister Krishna Matheora told AFP after voting as the polls opened early Sunday, arguing it was "important" for Santokhi's Progressive Reform Party (VHP) to win.

Whoever does take the reins will have a grand opportunity to transform the country's fortunes.

Experts say Suriname stands to make billions of dollars in the next decade or two from recently discovered offshore crude deposits.

French group TotalEnergies announced last year a $10.5 billion project to exploit an oil field off Suriname's coast with an estimated capacity of producing 220,000 barrels per day.

Production should start in 2028 and the country has created a "Royalties for Everyone" fund to put money from the expected windfall directly into the hands of citizens.

- China alliance -

Fourteen parties are taking part in Sunday's election, including Santokhi's centrist VHP and the leftist National Democratic Party (NDP) of deceased former coup leader and autocrat-turned-elected-president Desi Bouterse.

Also in the running is the center-left General Liberation and Development Party (ABOP) of Vice President Ronnie Brunswijk, a former guerrilla who rebelled against Bouterse's government in the 1980s.

Provisional results are expected by late Sunday.

Suriname, a diverse country made up of descendants of people from India, Indonesia, China, the Netherlands, Indigenous groups and African slaves, marks its 50th anniversary of independence from the Dutch throne this November.

Since independence, it has looked increasingly towards China as a political ally and trading partner and, in 2019, became one of the first Latin American countries to join the Asian giant's Belt and Road infrastructure drive.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio made a stopover in Suriname in March on a Latin American tour aimed at countering China's growing influence in the region.

More than 90 percent of the country is covered in forest and it is one of few in the world with a negative carbon footprint.

Santokhi insists this status is not in danger and that Suriname can use its oil windfall "for the transition towards the green energy which we need, also because we know the fossil energy is limited."

"It will be gone after 40 years."

G.Kucera--TPP