Making Suriname The Next Bitcoin Nation Inspires Presidential Candidate Maya Parbhoe To Fight Corruption And The Murder Of Her Father

Maya Parbhoe, a presidential candidate for the South American nation of Suriname, has an ambitious vision: To build a Bitcoin nation even more deeply rooted in crypto than Nayib Bukele’s El Salvador.

Her plan for Suriname extends well beyond making Bitcoin legal tender, including dismantling the central bank, cutting taxes, privatizing public services, issuing national Bitcoin bonds and pursuing widespread deregulation.

Parbhoe also sees Bitcoin as a way to address Suriname’s rampant corruption, something she and her family suffered firsthand when her father was murdered — allegedly by a hitman — amid a national scandal.

Maya Parbhoe’s Tragic Experience With Corruption

Parbhoe’s burning motivation to tackle corruption began when her father, Winod Parbhoe, was murdered in a drive-by shooting when Maya was 13 years old.

The tragedy took place shortly after he blew the whistle to several authorities, including the CIA, that millions of US dollars were being funneled to bank accounts at BNY Mellon through De Surinaamsche Bank (DSB), the largest bank in Suriname.

The funds were allegedly used to finance the Colombian guerrilla group FARC.

If the national economy were based on Bitcoin, the governmental budget would be transparent and traceable, and “we would become an open=source government.”

She also wants to create “a corruption bounty program so any person in the world could find corruption in the system and receive a reward for reporting it.”

Parbhoe’s vision has garnered significant support from the Bitcoin community, offering a glimmer of hope in her fight against systemic corruption. Only time will tell whether the momentum she’s building will be enough to reshape the country’s future.

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