Raadslieden in Pikin Saron zaak: Recht moet boven emoties staan

In a significant judicial development, the Court of Justice of Suriname on December 9th suspended the pretrial detention of five Indigenous men from Pikin Saron, a decision their legal representatives describe as both legally necessary and constitutionally inevitable. Defense attorneys Pamela Karg, Murwin Dubois, and Milton Castelen successfully argued for their clients’ provisional release through a motivated petition filed October 21st, after previous requests had been denied.

The case has emerged as one of Suriname’s most discussed criminal proceedings, stemming from a fatal incident during escalating tensions between Indigenous residents and outsiders allegedly entering their territory without community authorization. The defendants maintain they acted within a conflict situation arising from ongoing infringements on their residential and usage rights.

Public prosecutors had vehemently opposed release, citing serious criminal allegations and potential societal concerns. However, the defense team successfully countered that pretrial detention under Surinamese law constitutes an extreme measure rather than punishment, only justifiable when specific risks exist—none of which applied to these defendants who had never attempted escape, witness tampering, or investigation obstruction.

Human rights organizations have criticized the criminal prosecution as inseparable from underlying land rights struggles, considering the pretrial detention disproportionately applied. The defense highlighted broader context including substantial public support for the men, organizational capacity of Indigenous movements, and internationally recognized Indigenous rights.

This ruling enables the five men to await their appeal in freedom, aligning with fundamental rule of law principles. The attorneys view the decision as transcending individual case outcomes—it represents a corrective within Suriname’s criminal justice system regarding practices conflicting with international obligations, particularly concerning pretrial detention application, procedural risk assessment, and treaty compliance.

The defense specifically references Article 106 of Suriname’s Constitution, which prohibits application of national laws contradicting binding international treaties. Castelen expressed the collective position: ‘The Court’s decision confirms that legal provisions conflicting with treaty law cannot be blindly applied anymore.’

This suspension of detention sends a principled signal that criminal justice measures must be based on legal norms applicable to all defendants rather than emotions, societal pressure, or traditional practices.