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In 1980, a group of 16 army sergeants, led by Dési Bouterse, seized power in the small South American country of Suriname, overthrowing the government in a swift and violent coup d’état.
The coup came just five years after the country was granted independence from the Netherlands.
The country’s first president, Johan Ferrier, was forced to leave Suriname after the coup.
Rosemarijn Hoefte, professor of the history of Suriname at the University of Amsterdam, and Johan Ferrier's daughter, Cynthia, have been sharing their memories of that time with Matt Pintus.
(Photo: Johan Ferrier. Credit: Alamy)
By BBC World Service4.5
898898 ratings
In 1980, a group of 16 army sergeants, led by Dési Bouterse, seized power in the small South American country of Suriname, overthrowing the government in a swift and violent coup d’état.
The coup came just five years after the country was granted independence from the Netherlands.
The country’s first president, Johan Ferrier, was forced to leave Suriname after the coup.
Rosemarijn Hoefte, professor of the history of Suriname at the University of Amsterdam, and Johan Ferrier's daughter, Cynthia, have been sharing their memories of that time with Matt Pintus.
(Photo: Johan Ferrier. Credit: Alamy)

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