Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni
Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni ( is a commune of French Guiana, an overseas region and department of France located in South America. Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni is one of the two sub-prefectures of French Guiana and the seat of the Arrondissement of Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni. It is the second most populous city of French Guiana, with 42,612 inhabitants at the January 2017 census.
Geography
Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni is a border town in north-west French Guiana. It is located on the Maroni River, opposite the town of Albina in Suriname which can be reached by ferry or pirogue. It does not, therefore, have an Atlantic coast; this may have motivated the choice of the town's location, as the penal authorities wanted to prevent the escape of prisoners from their islet imprisonments by a sea route.The ethnic composition of the town is, as everywhere in French Guiana, diverse: Sranan Tongo speaking Maroons are today the largest ethnic group, followed by Creoles, Amerindians, Haitians, métropolitains and Brazilians.
Maroons will mostly be found in the neighbourhoods called la Charbonnière, les Vampires and les Sables Blancs. Amerindians are located in a few villages on the outskirts of town: Balaté, Paddock, Prospérité, Terre Rouge, Espérance, Village Pierre.
History
Founded in 1858 by Auguste Baudin, it was formerly the arrival point for prisoners, who arrived at the Camp de la Transportation.The town was near an Amerindian settlement called Kamalakuli named after their chief. On 15 September 1880, the town became the capital city of a special prison commune; the mayor was the Director of the Penitentiary Administration.
When Gaston Monnerville was elected Deputy in 1932, he tried to close the prison complex. On 17 June 1938, the prison was repealed, but the final closure did not come until 1946. On 9 November 1949, Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni became a regular commune.
Transport
Between 1890 and 1897, a 16 kilometre Decauville railway was contructed between Saint-Laurent-du Maroni and Saint-Jean-du-Maroni. Another 22 kilometre railway was built to the Charvein sawmill. The railways were abandoned after the penal camps closed.Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni can be accessed chiefly by road, the Route Nationale 1, from Cayenne. A new port was recently built on the Maroni, but currently lacks proper wharf infrastructure and sufficient river depth. The Saint-Maurice airfield was decommissioned in 1946, but is used for sports. The Saint-Jean road links Saint-Laurent to Saint-Jean-du-Maroni and the military base there.
In 2010, Route Nationale 5 opened connecting Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni starting from the Plateau des Mines to Apatou. The road was opened with the Tour of Guiana.
The town is also an important port of departure for those going inland via pirogue or to Albina in Suriname by ferry or pirogue.
Economy
The sugarcane fields near town produce "La Belle Cabresse" rum for the Saint Maurice rum company. The rum is 50 to 55% proof and of high quality.On the road to Saint-Jean-du-Maroni, one can find many small shops owned by Saramakas selling the woodwork for which they are famous - especially chairs and tables. There is also a village of Maroon artisans on the road to Javouhey.
Two military units are stationed at St-Jean's Camp Némo: the Groupement du service militaire adapté, which is part of the Ministry of Overseas France and is in charge of professional job reinsertion in the west of French Guiana; and the Maroni detachment of the 9th Marine Infantry Regiment whose job it is to patrol the river border and the jungles of the west of the département.In 2008, the two units has merged into the Regiment of the Adapted Military Service.
Environment
This river town has long been the headquarters of an important association for the protection of the environment: "Le pou d'agouti" (an environmental organisation named after an annoying local mite with an itchy bite which strives for the protection of local and regional fauna and flora.It is also the point of departure for several ecotourism circuits, most notably journeys upriver to explore the many creeks as well as the Amazonian rainforest; tourists can spend a night in the jungle in huts or tents. Another possibility is visiting the Voltaire Falls, situated upriver.
Industrial activities, slowly increasing urban density and its accompanying shantytowns as well as poaching have damaged the surrounding area, but on 23 May 2009, a species of Caecilian theretofore unknown to man was discovered in town.
Sights
Originally built by, and for, the French department of corrections or Administration Pénitentiaire, many old official buildings in Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni bear a distinctive architectural style, a unique mix of colonial style and penitentiary architecture. Bricks made from the local red clay were used by the convicts, who provided a free and never-ending workforce, to build a whole official and administrative district, starting with the main jailhouse itself, the Camp de la Transportation.Some of the main buildings in the old administrative district, locally called Le Petit Paris for its alleged reminiscence of a 19th-century French architecture:
- Le Camp de la Transportation and the adjacent Office du Tourisme;
- La Résidence du Gouverneur du bagne, today's residence of the sous-préfet, and formerly the governor's residence;
- Le Tribunal maritime, today's sous-préfecture;
- La Mairie and the former bank;
- The church;
- Le Trésor public;
- L'Hôtel La Tentiaire;
- La caserne Joffre ;
- The hospital.
Other notable sights from the penitentiary years include Saint-Jean-du-Maroni, formerly the Camp de la Relégation and today's main military HQ for western French Guiana. There is also a small island in the middle of the Maroni River which used to house the prisoners affected with leprosy. Papillon wrote about hiding there during one of his daring escapes.
Notable sights not related to the prisons:
- La Charbonnière: Maroon village founded by refugees from Suriname's civil war.
Climate
Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni features an equatorial climate that is a tropical rainforest climate more subject to the Intertropical Convergence Zone than the trade winds and with no cyclones. The temperatures are uniform throughout the year. It has a copious amount of rain throughout the year, classifying it as a rainforest climate as all months have more than of rain per month, unlike the south and east of French Guiana where the months of September and October are typically drier than this.Demographics
Historical population
Migrations
The places of birth of the 43,600 residents in the commune of Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni at the 2015 census were the following:- 64.1% were born in French Guiana
- 5.3% in Metropolitan France
- 0.9% in Martinique
- 0.5% in Guadeloupe
- 0.2% in other parts of Overseas France
- 29.0% in foreign countries ; among these, 28.4% were immigrants and 0.7% were children of French citizens born abroad
- born in Suriname: 7,631
- born in Brazil: 3,105
- born in Haiti: 1,199
- born in Guyana: 327
- born in other countries: 530