De West
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
De West is one of the two main newspapers of Suriname.
De West was founded in 1892, and in its early years was a conservative paper that had a somewhat antagonistic rivalry with the left-leaning Suriname, the other leading newspaper in what was then the Dutch colony of Suriname.[1]
The paper was forced to close in the early 1980s following a coup led by Dési Bouterse, but was allowed to reopen in 1984, although still under some government censorship.[2] As of 2002, it is the second-largest paper by circulation in Suriname, after De Ware Tijd, and takes an independent political stance.[3]
[edit] References
- ^ Rudolf Asveer Jacob van Lier (1971). Frontier Society: A Social Analysis of the History of Surinam. Martinus Nijhoof, p. 332.
- ^ Gary Brana-Shute (1986). "Back to the Barracks? Five Years 'Revo' in Suriname". Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 28 (1): 93–121. doi: .
- ^ (November 5, 2002). "Suriname: Transport and communications". . Economist Intelligence Unit