Moiwana massacre
Moiwana massacre Bloedbad van Moiwana | |
---|---|
Part of Surinamese Interior War | |
Location | Moiwana, Marowijne, Suriname |
Date | 29 November 1986 |
Attack type | Massacre |
Weapons | Automatic weapons, hand grenades, machetes, dynamite |
Deaths | At least 39 people, primarily women and children |
Perpetrators | Suriname National Army |
The Moiwana Massacre was a massacre perpetrated by the armed forces of Suriname on the Maroon village of Moiwana on 29 November 1986.
The massacre occurred during the Surinamese Interior War between the national army led by Dési Bouterse and the Jungle Commando led by Ronnie Brunswijk.[1]
Massacre
[edit]On 29 November 1986, a military unit of 70 men was sent by the government to Moiwana as it was thought to be one of Brunswijk's stronghold. The soldiers systemically massacred the residents of the village. The soldiers blocked off both ends of the village and shot every villager they encountered for over 4 hours. Many houses in the village were burned down.
Maroons fleeing genocide left Suriname for neighboring French Guiana where they lived in several refugee camps set up by French authorities to handle the massive influx of refugees. The Maroons were not granted the status of refugee so that they would not be eligible to work or receive welfare benefits. They lived in these camps until the early 1990s when France and Suriname signed peace accords to repatriate the stranded Maroons back in Suriname.[2]
Aftermath
[edit]On 15 July 2015, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights held the government of Suriname responsible for the massacre and mandated they compensate survivors and victims' relatives and prosecute those responsible for the killings.[3]
On 15 July 2006, the President of Suriname Ronald Venetiaan apologized to the Gaanman of the Ndyuka Gazon Matodya on behalf of the government for the massacre. 90% of 130 survivors and relatives of the victims were compensated $130,000 each from the government.[4]
References
[edit]- ^ BRANA-SHUTE, GARY (1996). "Suriname: A Military and Its Auxiliaries". Armed Forces & Society. 22, no. 3: 469–84. Retrieved 23 June 2023 – via JSTOR.
- ^ "The Moiwana Massacre". Rainforest Warriors: Human Rights on Trial, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011, pp. 83-103. https://doi.org/10.9783/9780812203721.83.
- ^ Thomas M. Antkowiak, Moiwana Village v. Suriname: A Portal into Recent Jurisprudential Developments of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, 25 Berkeley J. Int'l Law. 268 (2007). Available at: http://scholarship.law.berkeley.edu/bjil/vol25/iss2/6.
- ^ "Suriname apologizes for 1986 massacre - Americas - International Herald Tribune". The New York Times. 2006-07-16. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-23.
External links
[edit]Media related to Moiwana massacre of 1986 at Wikimedia Commons