Constitutional Court of Suriname

Constitutional court for Suriname From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Constitutional Court of Suriname

The Constitutional Court (Dutch: Constitutioneel hof) is the constitutional court for the Republic of Suriname. Its establishment was already foreseen in both the constitution of Suriname of 1975 and the current constitution of 1987, but it took until 4 October 2019 for the National Assembly to enact a law providing for the establishment of a constitutional court.[1] After some errors concerning the official proclamation of the establishment of the court were corrected,[2] the members of the court were installed on 7 May 2020.[3][4][5]

Quick Facts Established, Jurisdiction ...
Constitutional Court of Suriname
Constitutional Court of Suriname building in Paramaribo
Established2020
JurisdictionSuriname
LocationParamaribo, Suriname
Composition methodAppointment by the President upon nomination by the National Assembly
Authorised byArticle 144 of the Constitution of Suriname
Judge term length5 years (once renewable)
Number of positions8
President
CurrentlyGloria Karg-Stirling
Since7 May 2020
Vice President
CurrentlyKenneth Amoksi
Since7 May 2020
Close

The lack of a constitutional court became an imminent problem after the court-martial decided in 2015 that the 2012 amnesty law that should have halted the prosecution of the December murders must be tested in the constitutional court first.[6]

Composition

The composition of the court is as follows:[3][4][5]

President
  • Gloria Karg-Stirling
Vice President
  • Kenneth Amoksi
Members
  • Anoeradha Akkal-Ramautar
  • Rinette Djokarto
  • Maya Fokké-Manohar
Substitute members
  • Bien Sojo
  • Jornell Vinkwolk
  • Roy Chitanie

See also

References

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