Built for the people behind the desk — and the ones waiting in line
Automating your consular process is the key to reclaiming state revenue and sovereignty — and it's only attainable through the Suriname Diplomatic Gateway.
80% of visa, entry fee and passport applications handled automatically. Your staff focus on the cases that actually need them. And when local infrastructure fails, the system keeps running — because it doesn't depend on it.
The real problem
Every consulate in the network is processing the same application — manually — one document at a time. The system hasn't changed. The volume has. That gap is where revenue disappears, reputations take a hit, and good people burn out doing work a machine should handle.
Every entry fee, visa and passport request typed in by hand. Good people spending their day re-entering information that could read itself.
More than one in five applications sent back because something was missing. Each return means the applicant waits longer — and your team starts over.
When the power or internet goes down at a post, everything stops. No fallback. No continuity. The queue outside grows while the team waits for the connection to come back.
How it works
The document comes in. The system reads it, checks it against your rules, and decides — in seconds. No typing. No re-entering. No waiting for someone to be available. 80% of applications never need a human touch.
→ Your staff handle judgment. The system handles volume.
One place to see everything — every post, every application, every decision, in real time. Revenue, case status, and policy controls all in one view. No more calling around to find out where something is.
→ The Ministry sets the rules. The system enforces them.
The system runs in the cloud — not on a server at the post. So when local infrastructure goes down, applications keep moving. No lost days. No recovery sprint on Monday morning.
→ Always on. Everywhere.
Built to comply
The SDG wasn't built to impress — it was built to hold up under scrutiny. Every architecture decision was made with the question: what does a government actually need to feel safe putting sensitive data into this?
International standard for information security management. Passport and personal data protected to the highest global standard.
Essential for EU-based posts like Amsterdam. Full compliance with European data protection law.
Military-grade encryption. Role-based access control. Geo-redundant storage. Built on Microsoft's sovereign cloud.
Every action logged. Every decision traceable. Every access recorded. For internal control and parliamentary accountability.
Data sovereignty
The SDG runs on a zero-knowledge architecture. Broki Digital keeps the lights on — the Ministry keeps the keys.
We never see your data. Not because we choose to look away, but because the system is built so that we structurally cannot. If the Ministry revokes access tomorrow, the data becomes unreadable — to everyone, including us. That's not a promise. That's how it's built.
Phase 1 is an infrastructure audit and a working proof of concept. No long-term contract. No full deployment. No risk. You see it running on your own post, with your own data, before you commit to anything further.
Getting started
The first step costs less than a month of processing things the old way. Most posts recover that investment within 18 months — without adding a single person to the team.
We show up with a live system. You bring your team and your questions. No slides. No promises. Just something that works — and you can see it working.
We look at one post together — the network, the hardware, the current volume. That's the only commitment phase 1 requires. Everything after that is your call.
A working system on your post. Real applications, real decisions, real data — owned entirely by the Ministry from day one.
No system purchase required for the first conversation. Just 20 minutes.
Contact
We're not asking for a decision. Just a conversation. Twenty minutes, a live system, and an honest look at whether this is right for you.