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Suriname president's son sentenced in New York over Hezbollah proposal | |
(3 months later) | |
The son of Suriname’s president was sentenced on Tuesday to more than 16 years in prison, after pleading guilty last August to US charges that he tried to offer a home base to the Lebanese paramilitary group Hezbollah. | |
Dino Bouterse, 42, who worked in a Suriname counterterrorist unit, was sentenced by US district judge Shira Scheindlin in Manhattan. Bouterse had also admitted to drug trafficking and firearms charges. | |
US prosecutors accused Bouterse of inviting people he thought were from Hezbollah to establish a base in his home country, located north of Brazil, in exchange for $2m that was ultimately not paid. | |
Bouterse was arrested by Panamanian authorities after a sting in which he allegedly talked about his activities with confidential informants from the US Drug Enforcement Administration. | |
Hezbollah has since 1997 been designated by the US State Department as a foreign terrorist organisation. | |
Dressed in a blue-grey shirt and pants, Bouterse said prior to sentencing that “what I did does not really represent my country”, and that his imprisonment would hurt his 11 children, ages two to 19. | |
“I really regret my actions, and I am deeply, deeply, deeply ashamed of myself”, he said. “I take full responsibility”. | |
Prosecutors had urged that Bouterse spend 30 years to life in prison, in accordance with recommended federal guidelines. | |
Assistant US attorney Michael Lockard said this reflected Bouterse’s agreement to “open up his country” to terrorist camps, and a need to deter other government officials “willing to sell access”. | |
But the judge said the guidelines were “fundamentally unfair”, given that Bouterse appeared motivated by a desire to make “a lot of money” rather than help terrorists. She also said the sting meant Hezbollah had no actual role to begin with. | |
“Nothing in his history shows that he is a terrorist, or that he had terrorist sympathies”, Scheindlin said. “His greed got the better of him”. | |
After the sentencing, family members blew kisses to Bouterse, who smiled and gave a thumbs-up sign. He had been in federal custody since being transported to the United States. | |
Richard Rosenberg, a lawyer for Bouterse, called the sentence “very harsh”, but was glad Scheindlin “underscored the lack of any clear connection to any actual terrorism”. | |
Bouterse’s father, Desi Bouterse, ruled Suriname after a coup from 1980 to 1987, and has been accused of human rights violations. He reclaimed power in 2010 when he was elected president. |