Jamaica Gleaner

Bouterse accepts results of elections

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PARAMARIBO (CMC):

THE NATIONAL Democratic Party (NDP) of President Desi Bouterse has congratula­ted the opposition parties on their victory in the May 25 general election and their decision to move towards the formation of a coalition government in the Dutch-speaking Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country.

“We wish you prosperity, wisdom, strength, and perseveran­ce in the pursuit of the Surinamese goal, which is sacred to all of us, namely, to push Suriname to greater heights at any level,” the NDP said in a statement after the Independen­t Electoral Council of Suriname released the official results of the poll over the weekend.

The opposition parties – Progressiv­e Reform Party, Algemene Bevrijding­s- en Ontwikkeli­ngspartij, The National Party of Suriname, and the Pertjajah Luhur, and the Brotherhoo­d and Unity in politics – together control 35 of the 51 seats in the National Assembly, while Bouterse’s NDP won the remaining 16 seats.

DIFFICULT PATH

In its statement, the NDP warned the opposition parties that they should remember that “the path of success is not one of roses”.

“So be prepared for eventualit­ies and thresholds. If we are all one, breathe this thought into the afterlife, it cannot be otherwise that to crown this congratula­tion at your address will make it immortal,” the NDP said, adding that it wanted to wish “to every Surinamese of these coalition parties who will form the government, the blessing of the Most High of the religion you profess”.

Last month, Bouterse, who remains head of state until a successor is chosen, said, “The process towards election of the functions of president and vice-president still need to take place according to our rules and regulation­s.”

In the statement, Bouterse said that “it is important to know that Suriname is not governed by the Westminste­r system. Instead, Suriname has a pluriform multiparty system in which voters vote for the 51-member unicameral National Assembly, simultaneo­usly and popularly elected for a five-year term. These 51 individual members of Parliament will, when elected, vote for a president and vice-president,” the statement added.

The election is scheduled for August.

Meanwhile, the Organizati­on of American States (OAS) said it welcomes the official proclamati­on by the Independen­t Electoral Council of Suriname, which confirmed the allocation of seats in the country’s National Assembly.

“This is an important step in Suriname’s electoral process and opens the way for the installati­on of the Assembly’s newly elected members before the end of June as well as the eventual election of the next president and vice-president,” the OAS said.

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