Post: | President |
Body: | the Republic of Suriname |
Insignia: | Flag of the President of Suriname.svgborder |
Insigniacaption: | Standard of the president of Suriname |
Incumbent: | Chan Santokhi |
Incumbentsince: | 16 July 2020 |
Style: | Mr. President (Informal) His Excellency (Diplomatic) |
Status: | Head of state Head of government |
Residence: | Presidential Palace |
Seat: | Paramaribo |
Appointer: | National Assembly |
Termlength: | Five years, renewable indefinitely |
Constituting Instrument: | Constitution of Suriname |
Precursor: | Governor-General |
Inaugural: | Johan Ferrier |
Formation: | 25 November 1975 |
Deputy: | Vice President |
Salary: | 4,646,552 Surinamese dollars/133,560 USD annually[1] [2] |
Website: | Cabinet of the President |
The president of the Republic of Suriname (Dutch; Flemish: President van de Republiek Suriname) is, in accordance with the Constitution of 1987, the head of state and head of government of Suriname, and commander-in-chief of the Suriname National Army (SNL). The president also appoints a cabinet.
The current president is Chan Santokhi, a former chief of police. He is affiliated with the Progressive Reform Party (VHP). Santokhi was elected on 13 July 2020 as president by acclamation in an uncontested election,[3] and inaugurated on 16 July on the Onafhankelijkheidsplein in Paramaribo in a ceremony without the public presence due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[4] [5]
The office of president was created upon independence from the Netherlands in 1975. Until 1987, the presidency was mostly a ceremonial post, discharging most of the functions previously vested in the monarchy of the Netherlands. For all intents and purposes, real power was vested in the prime minister.
The first officeholder was Johan Ferrier, a schoolteacher and veteran politician who had served as governor since 1968. He resigned as president in August 1980, several months after a coup d'état. From then until 1988, the presidents were essentially army-installed puppets of army commander Dési Bouterse, who ruled as a de facto military dictator with few practical checks on his power.
Bouterse allowed multiparty elections in 1987, shortly after the current constitution was approved in a referendum. The presidency became an executive post, with duties and responsibilities similar to those of presidents in semi-presidential republics. On 24 December 1990, two days after Bouterse's resignation as army commander, the army called president Ramsewak Shankar to inform him that he and his cabinet were removed from office, in another coup d'état; police chief and acting army commander Ivan Graanoogst was appointed acting president. On 27 December 1990, Johannes Kraag became the president. The army returned power to civilians in 1991, and the president has been freely elected ever since.
The president and a vice president are elected by no less than a two-thirds supermajority of members in the National Assembly to a five-year mandate and are accountable to the Assembly. During their time in office, the president must forfeit any additional posts in politics or business.
A candidate must be a Surinamese national (resident in the country for at least six years) who is at least 30 years of age. A candidate must win at least two-thirds of the votes in the Assembly to be elected. If no candidate wins two-thirds after three rounds, the vote then goes to the United People's Congress, composed of the Assembly and local government officials. In this case, a simple majority is required.
The president is vested with extensive functional powers. The president names and dismisses ministers, signs bills, and names and dismisses diplomatic staff. He declares war and states of emergency with the ratification of the National Assembly. He concludes foreign treaties and agreements, again with the assent of the Assembly. He also exercises ceremonial duties such as conferring awards, receiving foreign diplomats, and granting pardons.
President | Term of office | Political party | Vice president(s) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Portrait | Name | Took office | Left office | Time in office | ||||
1 | Johan Ferrier | 1975 | 1980 | NPS | Position not established | |||
2 | Henk Chin A Sen | 1980[7] | 1982 | PNR | ||||
3 | Fred Ramdat Misier | 1982 | 1988 | Independent | ||||
4 | Ramsewak Shankar | 1988 | 1990 | VHP | Henck Arron (NPS) | |||
5 | Johan Kraag | 1990 | 1991 | NPS | Jules Wijdenbosch (NDP) | |||
6 | Ronald Venetiaan | 1991 | 1996 | NPS | Jules Ajodhia (VHP) | |||
7 | Jules Wijdenbosch | 1996 | 2000 | NDP | Pretaap Radhakishun (BVD) | |||
Ronald Venetiaan | 2000 | 2010 | years | NPS | Jules Ajodhia (VHP) | |||
Ramdien Sardjoe (VHP) | ||||||||
8 | Dési Bouterse | 2010 | 2020 | NDP | Robert Ameerali (ABOP) | |||
Ashwin Adhin (NDP) | ||||||||
9 | Chan Santokhi | 2020 | VHP | Ronnie Brunswijk (ABOP) |