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Nickerie Gets Condom Machine · 1 December 2006, 10:26 CET by Charles Vermeulen

Last month I dedicated a posting to the high rates of suicide and attempted suicide in Nickerie, a district on the north-west coast of former Dutch colony Surinam. I quoted journalist Armand Snijders then, according to whom these rates were probably (partly) bound up with the traditional, Hindustani background of most of the Nickerians as several suicides in which the victims were women occured when ‘dishonor’ was brought to the suicide’s family. This could happen when, for example, an unmarried woman gets pregnant. Since today, however, this shouldn’t be a cause for concern anymore. For, because of World AIDS Day, Nickerie gets a Condom Machine for the first time in its history. Surinamese daily newspaper Dagblad Suriname reports that the pupils of the secondary schools of Nickerie are supposed to walk in procession the center of the capital city of Nickerie, Nieuw-Nickerie, to watch the machine being used for the first time. Times change, also in Nickerie.

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Suicide District Nickerie (2) · 14 October 2006, 08:27 CET by Charles Vermeulen

"An epidemiological study in the Nickerie catchment area revealed high rates of suicide (48 per 100,000) and attempted suicide (207 per 100,000) on average in the years 2000-2004."

Some extra info on suicide in Nickerie in an abstract of ‘High rates of suicide and attempted suicide using pesticides in Nickerie, Suriname, South America’, an article by, among others, T. Graafsma and A. Kerkhof published Crisis [2006; 27(2): 77-81], which suggests that 2004 has been a somber nadir.

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Surinamese Rice Sector Struggling · 13 October 2006, 14:11 CET by Charles Vermeulen

Interior of a rice (paddy) processing factory in Nickerie
Interior of a padie processing factory / peeling-mill (Nickerie, Surinam, 01:58:35 PM SRT, 8 May, 2005)

In the previous posting I related about a possible connection between the high number of suicides and the struggling rice sector in the Surinam polder-district of Nickerie. In an article, entitled ‘Boeren zitten met geoogste padie’ (‘Farmers Saddled With Harvested Paddy’) in today’s edition of Dagblad Suriname Asha Bhagwat reports that Surinam padie farmers also struggle with a lack of sales potential, besides with low yields. According to Bhagwat’s report at least four big rice buyer-ups can’t buy this year’s harvest because they in turn lack export possibilities. As a result of this Surinamese rice farmers threaten to get saddled with millions of kilograms of rice.

Padie field in Boonacker, Nickerie
Padie field in Boonacker (Nickerie, Surinam, 09:36 AM SRT, 2 May, 2005)

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Suicide District Nickerie · 12 October 2006, 07:02 CET by Charles Vermeulen

Hindu temple Ganga Mandit
Hindu temple Ganga Mandit, located on the so-called Zeedijk (Sea-dike) (Nickerie, Surinam, 05:01:09 PM SRT, May 8, 2005)

When I returned to the Netherlands after a two weeks jouney through Surinam last year, the SLM Boeing offered its passengers an edition of Dutch newspaper Algemeen Dagblad, which included a report by Armand Snijders on Nickerie, the Surinam district where I spent most of the time that jouney. The report, entitled ‘Death is Much Loved in Nickerie. Despair Rules in Surinam Polder-District’ (‘De dood is zeer geliefd in Nickerie. Wanhoop regeert in Surinaams polderdistrict’) (14th May, 2005, page 8), outlined a gloomy picture of the district. According to it no fewer than 100 of Nickerie’s 25,000, mainly Hindustani inhabitants made a suicide attempt in 2004. In almost half of the cases an agricultural poison was used. In 20 cases the attempt actually lead to death. This meant that the number of Nickerian suicide attempts was among the highest in the world, ranking third only after those of India and China and being three times higher than the average.

At the time of the publication of Snijders’s report the causes of the high number of suicide attempts were unclear. However, the Hindustani background of the suicides probably played an important role, Snijders stated. Several suicides in which the victims were women occured when ‘dishonor’ was brought to the suicide’s family. This is the case, for example, when an unmarried woman gets pregnant. Furthermore, Snijders mentions arranged marriages and domestic violence as causes of suicide among Nickerian women. Alcoholic excess and unemployment, both related to Nickerie’s struggling, but still vital rice sector, are the main causes of suicide among men. To conclude, the inability of the usually reserved Hindustani Nickerians to communicate about their problems contributed to the high numbers as well.

Padie field in Nickerie
Padie fields (Nickerie, Surinam, 01:27:12 PM SRT, 8 May, 2005)

But Snijders’s report dates from May 2005 and is based on numbers dating from 2004. What is the current situation in Nickerie? Recently Nickerie.net, the ‘Gateway to Nickerie’, reported that Saturday 23rd of September a young man, only 29 years old, hung himself on a tree in his back-yard in the small village of Wageningen, possibly because his parents had urged him to marry. According to Nickerie.net this was the sixteenth suicide in Nickerie in 2006. (Zahier Azizahamad, ‘Zestiende suïcidegeval voor dit jaar in Nickerie’, Nickerie.net, 24th September 2006) This makes 2006 an even more gloomy year than 2004 (1.8 to 1.7 suicides a month respectively). The prospects aren’t good either. A few weeks ago the Surinamese newspaper Dagblad Suriname reported that several small padie farmers in Nickerie have to contend with low yields and that they threaten to burn their fields out of despair. (Santi Sieuw, ‘Situatie in Nickerie zeer dreigend’, Dagblad Suriname, 25th September, 2006)

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Offshoring Call Center Activities to Surinam · 22 March 2006, 07:45 CET by Charles Vermeulen

It was only a matter of time, before Dutch companies would discover the economic potential of the Dutch speaking Surinammers on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean, but yesterday Dutch news show RTL Nieuws (RTL News) could report that Dutch company Unamic is the first to set up an offshore call center in Paramaribo, the capital of former Dutch colony Surinam. The services of the call center, which is established in conjunction with Surinam telecommunications Company Telesur, cover ‘include data entry and the handling of in- and outbound telephone traffic and e-mail messages’. The wages of the Surinammers are relatively low – Unamic only needs to pay 2 euro an hour – and their Dutch – the official language of Surinam – is excellent.

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