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De Ware Tijd (English: The True Time) is one of four daily newspapers in Paramaribo, Suriname. As of 2002 [update] , it was the largest-circulation paper in the country, ahead of its rival, De West , and was described as taking a "staunchly independent stance" politically. [ 1 ]
This is a list of newspapers in Suriname.. De Ware Tijd dwtonline.com; De West dagbladdewest.com; Dagblad Suriname dbsuriname.com; GFC Nieuws gfcnieuws.com; Lam Foeng in Chinese ()
In 1978, Moor moved to Suriname where she taught at the Surinamese Pedagogical Institute and the Instituut voor de Opleiding van Leraren until her retirement in 1997. [1] In 1992, Moor became the chief editor of the De Ware Tijd Literair, the weekly literary section of De Ware Tijd.
Times of Suriname is a national newspaper in Suriname. [1] The paper is published daily (except on Sundays) in a broadsheet format with a reported circulation of 35,000-40,000.
In 1997, on the fortieth anniversary of the Surinamese newspaper De Ware Tijd, he was awarded the trotyi grani, an award for a trendsetter. [2] His rude lyrics about street life were not appreciated by everyone. Even parliamentary questions were made. Eventually, he made more than ten albums.
The December murders (Dutch: Decembermoorden) were the murders on 7, 8, and 9 December 1982, of fifteen prominent young Surinamese men who had criticized the military dictatorship then ruling Suriname.
In 2011, however, Surinamese newspaper de Ware Tijd reported that a Tiriyó man by the name of Mennio Moeshè had already discovered the site around 1990, when he was 27 years old. When Kamainja lost his dog, Mennio Moeshè told him about the existence of the caves with petroglyphs, and that he believed that the caves were inhabited by tigers ...
The military dictatorship imposed an evening curfew, and curtailed freedom of press (only one newspaper, de Ware Tijd, was allowed to continue publishing, but was subject to heavy censorship). In 1985, it banned political parties and restricted freedom of assembly.