Occupation of unused land or derelict buildings without the permission of the owner
Squatting in Suriname is the occupation of unused land or derelict buildings without the permission of the owner.
Maroons and indigenous peoples such as
TiriyóAmerindians have squatted buildings and illegal gold prospectors have occupied land.
History
Suriname became an independent republic in 1975, after previously being a Dutch colony.[1] The Dutch had recognised the land rights of the coastal Amerindians since 1686, and land rights of the various
maroon groups from 1760 onwards.[2] In 1815, following the ratification of the
Convention of London, Suriname became the only Dutch colony in the Guianas.[3]
In the 1990s, squatters occupied government-built housing at
Koewarasan and called their occupation Sunny Point. The occupiers were mostly
Maroons, who had been displaced by the
Surinamese Interior War.[4] The village of
Pokigron was destroyed in the conflict and people ended up squatting in a barracks near
Paramaribo.[5]
The
TiriyóAmerindians have a habit of squatting abandoned sites. People moved from
Kwamalasamutu to
Alalapadu in the 1970s, then Alalapadu was re-occupied from 1999 onwards. Derelict colonial-era buildings in
Kuruni were also squatted.[6]: 32 In
Amatopo, houses had been built for an abandoned
bauxite mining project. The first two settlers moved into the unused buildings near the airstrip and a pilot chased them away.
Asongo Alalaparu, the
granman (paramount chief of the tribe), told them to return and build their houses next to the facilities which were already present.[7]
The presence of gold in the interior, has attracted garimpeiros (illegal gold prospectors) who come mainly from
Brazil. They have founded
Antonio do Brinco[8] and
Villa Brazil among others.[9]
^Bulkan, Janette (2009). "Indigenous Rights and Building a Social Contract in the circum-Caribbean territories of Belize, Guyana and Suriname". In Aje, Lawrence; Lacroix, Thomas; Misrahi-Barak, Judith (eds.).
Re-Imagining the Guyanas. Horizons anglophones. Montpellier: Presses universitaires de la Méditerranée. pp. 137–156.
ISBN9782367813639.