Column: Kwestie Van ‘t Hogerhuysstraat vraagt om open en transparant bestuur

What was meant to be a straightforward infrastructure upgrade has morphed into a high-stakes political and governance crisis gripping Suriname, with the Van ‘t Hokerhuysstraat asphalt project becoming a flashpoint for partisan blame, public frustration, and a seemingly intractable institutional dilemma.

As debate around the stalled project grows louder by the day, the National Assembly has devolved into a back-and-forth of partisan recrimination. Political parties trade accusations of mismanagement, each shifting responsibility to the other: the current administration points fingers at the previous government, while opposition parties pin the gridlock on today’s ruling coalition. Even local construction firm Baitali NV has come under fire, with critics claiming the company is deliberately delaying project delivery by launching a second court challenge. While the political arena grows increasingly chaotic and the narrative around the crisis becomes ever more muddled, for ordinary Surinamese road users, the unfinished street remains nothing more than a persistent source of daily irritation and unmet expectation. Above all else, the public just wants one clear answer: when will construction resume, and when will the long-promised road upgrade finally be completed?

This lack of clarity has spilled over into social media, where the absence of consistent, official information has allowed facts, partisan opinions, and unsubstantiated speculation to blend into one unnavigable mess. Most residents can no longer distinguish what is actually happening with the project, all because the government has failed to deliver clear, honest, and transparent communication to the public.

In reality, the core issue is far more complex than the superficial political debate suggests. The Surinamese government is trapped between two competing, non-negotiable obligations, squeezed between pressures that are growing tighter by the day.

On one side, there is an irrevocable court ruling. In a democratic constitutional state, respecting and upholding judicial decisions is not an optional choice—it is a foundational principle of the rule of law that the government cannot simply ignore. On the other side stands the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), the primary financier of the asphalt project. From information that has already entered the public domain, it is clear the IDB has serious objections to the government implementing the court ruling, over fears that such a move would put the entire project’s funding at risk. Beyond this immediate crisis, the bank has also raised concerns that a breach of its funding terms could jeopardize future IDB financing and development projects across Suriname.

This is the government’s real dilemma—not the petty political sniping, personal attacks, and cross-party blame that dominate daily headlines. To press its case for enforcement of the original ruling, Baitali NV has indeed launched a second legal procedure, asking the court to increase a daily penalty for non-compliance from just 5,000 Surinamese dollars to 1 million Surinamese dollars. This is not a new dispute: the company is simply pushing the government to enforce a final ruling issued more than ten months ago. Whether Baitali’s demand is ultimately justified will be for the court to decide, but the existence of this new legal action does nothing to resolve the underlying impasse: the government remains caught between two weighty, conflicting obligations that it cannot easily reconcile.

It is for this exact reason that the government should choose to bring the full complexity of the situation to the public. The Surinamese people have a right to answers to core questions: What exact agreements were struck with the IDB? What legal risks does the government face from all possible outcomes? What potential solutions are currently being explored? What consequences will every available option have for taxpayers and future national development projects? Answering these questions openly would also lay the groundwork for a more substantive, balanced public debate, rather than the unproductive mudslinging that dominates today.

This crisis has already exposed a deeper flaw in Suriname’s governance culture: the country’s domestic legal order and its international funding agreements do not always align seamlessly. When the two clash, it creates a governance dilemma for which no simple, perfect solution exists. But good governance requires more than just careful decision-making—it requires that difficult choices and trade-offs are explained honestly to the public. Transparency is not a sign of uncertainty or weakness. On the contrary, it builds and strengthens the trust that citizens are entitled to place in their government. As long as the full context of the dilemma remains hidden from view, there will always be room for speculation, political spin, and cross-party blame. That outcome benefits no one: not the government, not the contractors, not the IDB, and certainly not the public, which will ultimately bear the consequences of whatever decision is reached.

There may be no perfect solution to this impasse. Every possible outcome will carry financial, legal, or governance trade-offs. That is precisely why the Surinamese public deserves a government that chooses to speak openly, not stay silent. The government has no reason to be ashamed of the dilemma it faces. In fact, it would demonstrate real strength to openly acknowledge the situation: “We are caught between an irrevocable judicial ruling and the funding requirements of our international financier. Both carry significant weight, and we are carefully exploring a path that allows Suriname to honor both its rule of law commitments and its international obligations.”

Today, the Van ‘t Hogerhuysstraat project is about far more than just a public road tender. It has become a critical test of good governance for Suriname—and that test begins with radical openness.