Assemblee mist quorum, ABOP-fractie tekent uit onvrede presentielijst niet

Suriname’s National Assembly encountered an unexpected political standstill on Wednesday as lawmakers failed to convene a scheduled parliamentary session due to insufficient attendance. The session was abruptly postponed after coalition partner ABOP, alongside VHP faction members, refused to sign the attendance registry, preventing the government from achieving the mandatory quorum required for legislative proceedings.

Only 25 parliamentarians officially registered their presence, falling short of the 26-member threshold necessary for conducting official business. The dramatic development exposed deepening fractures within the ruling coalition, particularly surrounding the suspension of Grassalco director Wensly Rozenhout, an ABOP party member implicated in the disappearance of approximately 4 kilograms of raw gold valued at over $400,000 from the state-owned company’s vaults.

NDP faction leader Rabin Parmessar expressed astonishment at ABOP’s maneuver, stating: ‘ABOP has surprised us by not providing quorum.’ According to parliamentary sources, ABOP Chairman Ronnie Brunswijk explicitly instructed his faction members to boycott the attendance registry signing process before the session’s commencement, a directive that was systematically followed.

The gold disappearance incident, which remains unresolved despite governmental inquiries, has triggered significant internal discord. Rozenhout’s provisional suspension stems from his alleged failure to provide satisfactory explanations to government investigators regarding the missing precious metals.

Parmessar noted that with ABOP’s participation, the coalition commands 28 seats—two above the quorum requirement—but without them, legislative proceedings become impossible. The NDP leader indicated that had he received advance notice of ABOP’s intention to withhold quorum, he would have prevented absences within his own faction. Assembly President Ashwin Adhin formally postponed the session after clerk Ruth de Windt read aloud the names of legislators who had signed the attendance registry.