Suriname Leader's Son Faces Hizbullah-Linked Terrorism Charge in U.S.

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U.S. prosecutors have charged the son of the president of Suriname with terrorism offenses, saying he agreed to provide heavy weapons and a home base in his South American country to undercover operatives pretending to be with Hizbullah.

Dino Bouterse was charged with attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization in a grand jury indictment unsealed in New York on Friday.

Bouterse, who had been picked by his father to lead a "counterterrorism" unit in Suriname, is already in a U.S. jail and had previously been charged with cocaine trafficking. He was arrested in Panama in August and quickly extradited to the U.S.

One of his lawyers in New York, Florian Miedel, declined to comment on the new charges Friday, saying he needed time to review the allegations.

Prosecutors said Bouterse agreed to accept a multimillion-dollar payoff in exchange for allowing large numbers of Hizbullah fighters to use Suriname as a base for attacking American targets.

The indictment describes a sophisticated international sting in which Bouterse was recorded meeting in Greece and Panama with people posing as Hizbullah agents and Mexican drug traffickers. In reality, they were actually confidential sources and undercover agents with the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, the indictment said.

At one July meeting in Greece, the indictment said, Bouterse agreed to take a down payment of $2 million. In return, he said he would help Hizbullah fighters settle in Suriname, give them fake identities and arm them with surface-to-air missiles and other weapons for attacks on the U.S. and the Netherlands, Suriname's former colonial ruler.

Bouterse also told the American agents that he was interested in using Hizbullah "tough guys" for operations inside Suriname itself.

"We need a little fort that we can depend on. And we can call them at any time," he said, according to the indictment.

Bouterse's father, Desi Bouterse, led a military dictatorship in Suriname in the 1980s, then returned to power when he was elected president by the country's parliament in 2010. He has been accused of human rights violations, dating to the period when the country was under military rule, and was convicted in absentia in the Netherlands on drug trafficking charges in 1999.

Desi Bouterse has previously said that he was shocked by his son's arrest, but added that he was "responsible for his own actions."

Comments 5
Thumb benzona 09 November 2013, 09:13

Make an example of him. For those who wonder where Surinam is it's a former dutch colony located in south america. I once considered moving to that country....

Thumb general_puppet 09 November 2013, 09:30

Another US-Zionist plot trying to stain the saintly name of the Iranian militia, by insinuating this was a bad thing… Mr. Bouterse just wanted to be business partners with Hizbullah in the South American branch of their drug division, he heard they were the Best!

BTW, momo if you drop-by any word on Nasrallah's impending speech? Are the Ayatollah's new orders late or is he having technical broadcasting difficulties in the bunker :-)

Thumb benzona 09 November 2013, 09:39

Walaw, M14 and the king of Saudi Arabia are behind it! lol

Missing peace 09 November 2013, 18:39

Hizbullah "tough guys" and empty brains he should add....

Default-user-icon Sam (Guest) 10 November 2013, 22:12

lol Flamecatcher they weren't Hezbollah operatives they were CIA agents posing as them so I don't see how that implicates Hezbollah you completely ignored that part of the story. It wasn't the name of Hezbollah that opened the door to this opportunity rather it was the $2 million carrot that the CIA dangled before this guy.