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This is a list of newspapers in Suriname . De Ware Tijd ( Paramaribo) dwtonline.com. De West ( Paramaribo) dagbladdewest.com. Dagblad Suriname ( Paramaribo) dbsuriname.com. GFC Nieuws ( Paramaribo) gfcnieuws.com. Lam Foeng in Chinese ( Paramaribo) Star Nieuws ( Paramaribo) starnieuws.com. Suriname Herald ( Paramaribo) srherald.com.
De West is one of the main newspapers of Suriname . De West was founded in 1892, and in its early years was a conservative paper that had a somewhat antagonistic rivalry with the left-leaning Suriname, the other leading newspaper in what was then the Dutch colony of Suriname. [1] De West became a daily newspaper in 1950 owned and edited by ...
Dagblad Suriname is one of the leading daily Surinamese newspapers. It is published in the Dutch language in Paramaribo . Dagblad was founded in 2002, and is part of FaFam Publishing N.V. [1] The newspaper has been described as centre left.
A poll among the readers on the website of Dagblad Suriname, a popular newspaper, showed that about two weeks before the elections, around 90% were concerned about the debts that Suriname had to pay off. [12] In January 2020, it was announced that the equivalent of around US$100 million had disappeared from the Central Bank of Suriname (CBvS). [13]
Times of Suriname is a national newspaper in Suriname. The paper is published daily (except on Sundays) in a broadsheet format with a reported circulation of 35,000-40,000. [2] [3] The paper was founded in December 2003 by (at the time) rich business man and politician Rudi Dilip Sardjoe and claims to be a quality news paper and the largest and ...
de Ware Tijd. De Ware Tijd (English: The True Time) is one of four daily newspapers in Paramaribo, Suriname. As of 2002, it was the largest-circulation paper in the country, ahead of its rival, De West, and was described as taking a "staunchly independent stance" politically. [1] It is published in the Dutch language, and privately owned.
Soon after Suriname obtained its independence, most Europeans returned to the Netherlands. Around 300,000 Surinamese also decided to move to Europe and take Dutch citizenship. [2] In February 1980 Dési Bouterse , head of the Surinamese military, staged a violent coup d'état against Prime Minister Henck Arron and Bouterse became de facto ...
Bilateral relations France–Suriname relations Suriname France Diplomatic relations between France and Suriname were established on 25 August 1976. Suriname and the French overseas department of French Guiana share a common border of 520 kilometres (320 mi). Suriname operates an embassy in Paris, a consulate in Cayenne, and an honorary consulate in Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni. France operates an ...