Regering komt burgers tegemoet bij vervallen bereidverklaringen

The Surinamese government has announced significant administrative reforms to address citizen grievances regarding expired land declaration documents. Minister Stanley Soeropawiro of the Ministry of Land and Forest Management (GBB) revealed the implementation of a temporary recovery period for citizens who faced expiration of their ‘bereidverklaring’ (declaration of readiness) due to bureaucratic delays beyond their control.

Investigation revealed that numerous citizens had fulfilled their obligations correctly and timely, yet encountered expiration of their land documents due to processing delays within administrative channels, including surveyor backlogs and mapping documentation issues. These bureaucratic hurdles forced applicants to restart the entire application process while incurring additional costs.

While maintaining the statutory six-month validity period for land declarations, the ministry now introduces a one-month recovery window. During this period, legally expired declarations can be administratively processed under strict conditions, exclusively for administrative completion rather than substantive modifications.

The remedial measure applies exclusively when three conditions are met: the delay must be demonstrably administrative and not caused by the citizen; the term exceedance must remain limited; and the file content must remain substantively unchanged.

Minister Soeropawiro emphasized that justice and relief for affected citizens form the cornerstone of this policy. ‘When citizens fulfill their obligations correctly but experience delays within the administrative chain, it is unreasonable to hold them accountable. This measure demonstrates our commitment to supporting citizens,’ the minister stated.

The policy takes immediate effect and remains valid until June 30, 2026, providing temporary relief while the government works on longer-term administrative reforms.