Suriname (country) - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
Tongo, a Creole language.
Also known as Taki-Taki, Sranang Tongo includes elements of several languages and is the vehicle for most interethnic communication.
Otherlanguages spoken in Suriname include Hindi, Javanese, Chinese, English, and French.
Small numbers of Native Americans still speak indigenous languages.
The main religions in Suriname are Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism.
The majority of Christians are Roman Catholics, and members of the Moravian Church predominateamong Protestants.
East Indians are predominantly Hindu, although they include some Muslims.
Most of the Muslims in Suriname are of Indonesian descent.
B Education
School attendance is required for Surinamese children aged 6 to 12, and 64,852 attended primary school in 2000.
The literacy rate is 94.2 percent.
Suriname has oneuniversity, the Anton de Kom University of Suriname, which was founded in Paramaribo in 1968.
IV ECONOMY
Economic development in Suriname has been hindered by the small population, the difficulty of reaching the interior, and the military and political unrest of the 1980s.Bauxite is the mainstay of the economy, and the mining and processing of it into alumina and aluminum is the major source of income.
Bauxite, alumina, and aluminumalso are the chief exports, with the result that Suriname’s economy is vulnerable to fluctuations in world prices for these products.
The United States aluminum companyALCOA operates in Suriname and in the early 2000s announced plans to expand its operations there.
Suriname also has deposits of gold, iron ore, manganese, copper, and other minerals, but these remain largely unexploited.
The country uses most of the petroleum itproduces.
Other products manufactured in Suriname include food and beverages, tobacco products, construction materials, and clothing.
Most of the manufacturingindustries use local materials.
Agriculture is confined mainly to the coastal plains, but the river valleys and savanna of the interior offer great potential for expansion.
Rice is Suriname’s chief crop,and about half of the country’s farmland is used for growing rice.
Sugarcane was for centuries the mainstay of the economy but is now relatively unimportant.
Othercrops include bananas and plantains, oil palms, and citrus fruits.
Shrimp fishing is expanding along the coast, and shrimps contribute to the country’s export income.
A Tourism
Tourism is not highly developed in Suriname.
The capital has interesting buildings in a Dutch colonial style.
In the interior there are a number of nature reserves inwhich to view tropical plants and wildlife.
Transportation to the interior is primarily by airplane or up the rivers by boat.
B Trade and Currency
In 2001 exports totaled $306 million.
Imports totaled $443 million; imports usually consist mostly of food, fuels, and industrial goods.
Principal purchasers of Suriname’sexports are the United States, Norway, France, and Canada.
The chief sources of imports are the United States, Netherlands, Trinidad and Tobago, and Japan.
In 1995Suriname joined in forming the Association of Caribbean States (ACS), a free-trade organization.
The organization’s other members include 12 nations bordering on orin the Caribbean and the members of the Caribbean Community and Common Market (CARICOM).
The monetary unit is the Suriname dollar of 100 cents (2.735 dollars equaled US$1; 2004).
It replaced the Suriname guilder in 2004 in a government attempt to restoreconfidence in the economy.
The bank of issue is the Centrale Bank van Suriname.
C Transportation and Communication
Transportation facilities in Suriname are concentrated in the northern part of the country.
The nation has 4,304 km (2,674 mi) of roads.
The principal road runs east-west and links Albina with Nieuw Nickerie.
There are no passenger railroads.
Boats carry people along Suriname’s inland rivers and canals and between towns on itscoast.
Paramaribo and Nieuw Nickerie are the chief seaports, and Moengo, Paranam, and Smalkalden are important ports for shipping bauxite.
Suriname’s principalairport is at Zanderij; Suriname Airways is the national airline.
The country has several radio stations and two television stations.
Broadcasts are in Dutch and several other languages.
There were 728 radio receivers, 253 televisionsets, and 180 telephone mainlines for every 1,000 inhabitants in 1997.
V GOVERNMENT
Until 1980 Suriname was governed under a constitution adopted in 1975.
The government was headed by a popularly elected president, a council of ministers, and aunicameral parliament.
Following a coup d’état in 1980, the constitution was suspended, parliament was dissolved, and the Policy Center, a council dominated by themilitary, began ruling by decree.
A new constitution, adopted by referendum in 1987, established a 51-member National Assembly with the power to select the president.
The president is elected to afive-year term.
Members of the National Assembly are elected to five-year terms by popular vote.
VI HISTORY
Before the advent of Europeans, the territory that is now Suriname was inhabited by tribes of Arawak, Carib, and Warrau Native Americans.
Most Native Americanslived in small, independent villages in which kinship ties formed the basis of community.
They lived by hunting and farming, mainly of root crops such as cassava(manioc).
The coastal peoples spoke Arawakan languages; those in the interior spoke Cariban languages.
A European Settlement
Dutch, French, and English traders established stations along the coast of Suriname in the late 16th century.
English traders began to colonize the region during thefirst half of the 17th century.
The first permanent European settlement was a plantation colony established in 1650 on the Suriname River by a British group.
A fleet ofthe Dutch West India Company later captured this colony.
With the Treaty of Breda in 1667, the English ceded their part of the colony to the Netherlands in exchangefor New Amsterdam (which became New York City), and Suriname was officially brought under Dutch rule.
Thereafter, the Netherlands ruled Suriname as a colony,except during two brief wartime periods, from 1795 to 1802 and from 1804 to 1816, when the British retook it..
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- LA MUSIQUE COUNTRY
- Country- und Western-Musik - Musik.
- Surinam ou Suriname.
- Pays noir, en anglais Black Country, terme imagé désignant les régions industrielles fondées sur l'extraction du charbon depuis l'époque de la révolution industrielle.
- Nelson Mandela's Inaugural Address Nobel Peace Prize winner and former political prisoner, Nelson Mandela, was elected president of the Republic of South Africa in April 1994 in the country's first multiracial elections.