- Source: Kuruni
- Kota Yogyakarta
- Kuala Kurun (kota)
- Ayrton Senna
- Kesultanan Utsmaniyah
- Prasejarah
- Borobudur
- Prabu Siliwangi
- Bahasa Indonesia
- Sinkronis dan diakronis
- Lambang Suriah
- Kuruni
- Kuruni (tribe)
- Tamil units of measurement
- Sri Lankan units of measurement
- Kurds in Iran
- From Old Country Bumpkin to Master Swordsman
- Ko Sira
- Kurdish tribes
- Korouni dialect
- Bengali cuisine
Kuruni (also: Curuni and Coeroeni) is a village in the Coeroeni resort in the Sipaliwini District of Suriname. The village is inhabited by indigenous people of the Tiriyó tribe. The inhabitants are of the subgroup Aramayana or the Bee people.
Overview
The population as of 2022 is 88 people. There is no school in the village. In 2007, a medical clinic was opened in Kuruni, and is being managed by rotating nurses from Kwamalasamutu. As of November 2019, the villages has 24 hours of electricity using solar panels.
History
In 1959, the Coeroenie Airstrip was constructed to access the interior, and to map mineral resources. In 1965, a camp was constructed near the airstrip to house workers for a planned weir. The village was not intended for permanent habitation. On 12 December 1967, four armed men of the Guyana police force landed and told the workers to leave Camp Oronoque which marked the beginning of the Tigri conflict. Kuruni became a military outpost of the Surinamese army near the border, but was disbanded again in 1968. In 1995, a small group of people from Kwamalasamutu moved into the prefab houses which had been left behind. In 2001 or 2002, granman (paramount chief) Asongo Alalaparu sent a Captain with his extended family to the village.
References
Bibliography
Heemskerk, Marieke; Delvoye, Katia (2007). Trio Baseline Study: A sustainable livelihoods perspective on the Trio Indigenous Peoples of South Suriname (PDF). Paramaribo: Stichting Amazon Conservation Team-Suriname.
Mans, Jimmy (2011). Hofman, Corinne Lisette; Van Duijvenbode, Anne (eds.). Chapter: Trio movements and the Amotopoan flux. Leiden: Sidestone Press. ISBN 978-90-88-90063-1.