Paul Bhagwandas


Paul Bhagwandas was one of the sergeants who participated in a military coup in Suriname on 25 February 1980. He was a battalion commander and the third man in the military dictatorship after DĂ©si Bouterse and Roy Horb. He was known as "the executioner of Fort Zeelandia".

Life

Like DĂ©si Bouterse, Bhagwandas was educated in the Netherlands where he rose to sergeant and was trained at the Royal Military School in Weert. He then went to work in the Dutch military. After the independence of Suriname in 1975, he returned with a number of other Surinamese soldiers to work for the new Surinamese Armed Forces .

Coup d'Ă©tat

Along with fifteen others, Bhagwandas took part in a coup d'Ă©tat in Suriname on 25 February 1980. Discontent had increased among the general public, so Bhagwandas suggested taking action stating, at a meeting of the military in early December, that it was necessary to do something drastic to save the "revolution". Over the following days it was decided to arrest a number of opponents of the military dictatorship. Bhagwandas was in charge of the arrests and the internment of these individuals in Fort Zeelandia.

December murders

The December Murders of fifteen objectors to the new regime took place over the period between 7–9 of December, 1982. Reportedly after the arrests, Bouterse went to his office and gave Bhagwandas the order to bring him the captives one by one. Bhagwandas was reported to have been present when Bouterse made the decision to execute each of the captives and was himself involved in the execution of at least two of the hostages who were then carried out by Bouterse. When Bouterse suggested that one of the hostages be spared,, it was Bhagwandas who disagreed, stating that they should all be killed. He was also present at the remaining executions which took place on the inner courtyard of the barracks.

Football coach

Bhagwandas left the military in the mid-eighties and became involved with the Surinamese Football Association . The André Kamperveen Stadion, named after André Kamperveen, a prominent Surinamese football player, sports administrator, politician and businessman, murdered in the December murders, is where Bhagwandas took the position of coach of the Suriname national football team in 1989.
In 1993, Voetbal International published an article about the Surinamese football coach. Henri Does of the Surinamese organization SAWO wrote the following:
Translation:

Declaration and death

Henri Behr, brother of murdered journalist Bram Behr, visited Bhagwandas in his house shortly before he died in 1996, and Bhagwandas admitted to having been involved in the murder of his brother. According to Behr, Bhagwandas stated that Bouterse himself was present, and that he had murdered Surendre Rambocus and Cyrill Daal. Behr secretly recorded part of the conversation, and turned the tape over to the chairman of the Surinamese human rights organization OGV. The tape has since been lost.
Bhagwandas died of cancer in 1996.