Second Pourier cabinet

The Second Pourier cabinet was the 19th Cabinet of the Netherlands Antilles.

Composition
The cabinet was composed as follows:


 * Minister of General Affairs and Constitutional Affairs
 * Miguel Pourier
 * PAR
 * 31 March 1994
 * rowspan="2"|Minister of Traffic and Communications
 * Leo Chance
 * SPA
 * 31 March 1994
 * Danny Hassell
 * WIPM
 * March 1998
 * rowspan="2"|Minister of Justice
 * Pedro Atacho
 * PAR
 * 31 March 1994
 * Mike Willem
 * PAR
 * March 1998
 * rowspan="2"|Minister of Finance
 * Etienne Ys
 * PAR
 * 31 March 1994
 * Harold Henriquez
 * PAR
 * 10 July 1995
 * rowspan="2"|Minister of Labor and Social Affairs
 * Jeffrey Corion
 * PAR
 * 31 March 1994
 * Mike Willem
 * PAR
 * 1996
 * rowspan="2"|Minister of Public Health
 * Stanley Inderson
 * MAN
 * 31 March 1994
 * Beatriz Doran-Scoop
 * MAN
 * August 1996
 * rowspan="2"|Minister of Development Aid
 * Edith Strauss-Marsera
 * PDB
 * 31 March 1994
 * Martha Dijkhoff
 * PAR
 * December 1997
 * Minister of Education
 * Martha Dijkhoff
 * PAR
 * 31 March 1994
 * State Secretary of General Affairs
 * Harold Arends
 * PAR
 * 5 April 1994
 * rowspan="2"|State Secretary of Constitutional Affairs
 * Leonora Sneek-Gibbs
 * DP-ste
 * 11 April 1994
 * Ralph Berkel
 * DP-ste
 * 2 January 1997
 * State Secretary of Economic Affairs
 * Danny Hassell
 * WIPM
 * 31 March 1994
 * }
 * PAR
 * 5 April 1994
 * rowspan="2"|State Secretary of Constitutional Affairs
 * Leonora Sneek-Gibbs
 * DP-ste
 * 11 April 1994
 * Ralph Berkel
 * DP-ste
 * 2 January 1997
 * State Secretary of Economic Affairs
 * Danny Hassell
 * WIPM
 * 31 March 1994
 * }
 * WIPM
 * 31 March 1994
 * }


 * Etienne Ys was appointed Commissioner of finance for the Island Territory of Curaçao.
 * A parliamentary report on the state of the prison system led Atacho to resign on 24 March 1998.
 * In 1996 Inderson resigned after a faulty water filter in one of Curaçao's hospitals caused the death of nine dialysis patients.
 * Corion was nominated as a member of the Pourier cabinet by the Curaçao trade union movement. He resigned on 16 July 1996 after the trade union became dissatisfied with his performance.