Bouterse sworn-in as Suriname president

PARAMARIBO, (Reuters) – Former coup leader and  convicted cocaine smuggler Desi Bouterse was sworn in yesterday as president of Suriname and promised to work with the  opposition to develop the South American country.

Bouterse, who previously seized power in two coups and is  wanted in the Netherlands to serve a drugs sentence, was  elected by parliament last month after his Mega Combination  coalition won most seats in a May election.

“I solemnly promise that service and sacrifice will be the  base of my work,” he said at a colorful ceremony at an indoor  stadium in the capital Paramaribo, after outgoing leader Ronald  Venetiaan signed a proclamation transferring power.

“The opposition are not our opponents. We see them as  cooperation partners to accomplish policy together,” Bouterse  said, also vowing to fight against corruption.

Foreign investors are waiting to see if he is able to  reinvent himself despite his track record, but fear he may  ditch economic policies that have helped his small country of  490,000 people weather the global financial crisis.

No other heads of state were at the swearing-in. Venezuelan  President Hugo Chavez had been due to attend, Suriname  officials said, but sent his foreign minister instead.

Suriname, a former Dutch colony on the continent’s  northeastern shoulder, won independence in 1975 and is now a  gold and bauxite miner with a nascent oil industry.

Bouterse has said he hopes to strengthen ties with Brazil  and China after he takes office. The Asian giant is already  deeply involved in logging and road building in Suriname.

Bouterse, 64, took part in two coups in 1980 and 1990, and  still faces prosecution in his country for the execution of 15  opponents in 1982 during his military rule. That trial began  three years ago, but he has refused to attend court and the  proceedings have continued without him.

He was also convicted in absentia of drug-trafficking by  the Netherlands in 1999, which has prevented him from travelling  to countries that have extradition treaties with Amsterdam.

When Bouterse was elected last month, Dutch Foreign  Minister Maxime Verhagen said in a statement he would only be  welcome in the Netherlands to serve his 11 year sentence.