Seychelles - HISTORY
Seychelles
Although known and visited by traders from the Persian Gulf area and
East Africa in earlier times, the Seychelles Archipelago first appeared
on European maps at the beginning of the sixteenth century after
Portuguese explorers sighted the islands during voyages to India.
Recorded landings did not occur until 1609, however, when members of the
British East India Company spent several days on Mah� and other nearby
islands. A French expedition from Mauritius reached the islands in 1742,
and during a second expedition in 1756 the French made a formal claim to
them. The name "Seychelles" honors the French minister of
finance under King Louis XV. Settlement began in 1778 under a French
military administration but barely survived its first decade. Although
the settlers were supposed to plant crops only to provision the garrison
and passing French ships, they also found it lucrative to exploit the
islands' natural resources. Between 1784 and 1789, an estimated 13,000
giant tortoises were shipped from Mah�. The settlers also quickly
devastated the hardwood forests--selling them to passing ships for
repairs or to shipyards on Mauritius. In spite of reforms to control the
rapid elimination of trees, exploitation of the forest continued for
shipbuilding and house building and later for firing cinnamon kilns,
ultimately destroying much of the original ecology.
Possession of the islands alternated between France and Britain
several times during the French Revolution and the Napoleonic wars.
France ceded Seychelles--which at that time included the granitic group
and three coral islands--to Britain in 1814 in the Treaty of Paris after
rejecting a British offer to take French holdings in India in place of
Seychelles. Because Britain's interest in the islands had centered
mainly on halting their use as a base for French privateering, its main
concern was to keep the islands from becoming burdens. Britain
administered Seychelles as a dependency of Mauritius, from which they
received little attention and few services.
The first European settlers were French who had been living on
Mauritius, Reunion, or in French settlements in India. Many lived in
conditions of poverty quite similar to those of their African slaves,
who from early on greatly outnumbered the remainder of the population.
After the abolition of slavery in the islands in 1834, many settlers
left, taking their slaves with them. Later, large numbers of Africans
liberated by the British navy from slaving ships on the East African
coast were released on Seychelles. Small numbers of Chinese, Malaysians,
and Indians moved to the islands, usually becoming small traders and
shopkeepers. Intermarriage among all groups except the Indians was
common, however, and left so few families of pure descent that by 1911
the practice of categorizing residents according to race was abandoned.
Before 1838 most Seychellois worked on white-owned estates as slaves,
producing cotton, coconut oil, spices, coffee, and sugarcane, as well as
sufficient food crops to support the population. After the abolition of
slavery, they became agricultural wage laborers, sharecroppers, fishers,
or artisans, settling as squatters where they liked. Labor-intensive
field crops rapidly gave way to crops that required relatively little
labor, including copra, cinnamon, and vanilla. Only those industries
related to processing the cash crops or exploiting natural resources
developed. As a result, the increasing population quickly came to depend
on imports for most basic necessities, including food and manufactured
goods.
<>Crown Colony Status, 1903
<>Steps Toward Independence, 1967-76
<>Coup by Ren� Supporters, 1977
Seychelles
Seychelles - Crown Colony Status, 1903
Seychelles
Political development proceeded very slowly. From 1814 until 1903,
when the islands became a crown colony, they were granted increasing
administrative autonomy from Mauritius. In 1888 separate nominated
administrative and executive councils were established for Mauritius and
Seychelles. Thus, for the first time, some landed white Seychellois were
allowed to serve in official advisory positions. In 1897 the
administrator of Seychelles was given the powers of a colonial governor,
although it was not until 1903 that the islands were separated from
Mauritius. When Seychelles became a separate colony, the other islands
of the archipelago, except for Coetivy and the Farquhar Islands, were
added to the original group acquired by Britain in 1814. Coetivy was
transferred from Mauritius in 1908 and the Farquhars in 1922 after World
War I.
Widespread involvement of Seychellois in their own political affairs
began in 1948 after World War II, when Britain granted suffrage to
approximately 2,000 adult male property owners, who then elected four
members to the Legislative Council that advised the governor. The
winning candidates were drawn from a group known as the Seychelles
Taxpayers' and Producers' Association (STPA), which represented the
landed strata of society--known colloquially as the grands blancs
(great whites). The STPA defended its members' interest in matters of
crop marketing and other issues and was the principal political force in
the nation until the early 1960s, when representatives of the small new
urban professional and middle class began to win seats.
Two parties emerged to represent this new constituency: the DP, led
by James Mancham, and the SPUP, led by France Albert Ren�. Both men
were London-educated lawyers who had returned to Seychelles determined
to improve local conditions and to develop popularly based local
politics.
Although community rivalries and the differing styles of the two
leaders were important in attracting followers, the two parties also
differed in substantive ways. The SPUP called itself socialist, favored
worker-oriented policies, and pressed for complete independence from
Britain and a nonaligned foreign policy. The pressure for independence
was intensified after Britain in 1965 removed �le Desroches, the
Aldabra Islands, and the Farquhar Islands from Seychelles and made them
part of the British Indian Ocean Territory. The DP took a more
laissez-faire capitalist approach and wanted to continue the association
with Britain and to allow British and United States bases on the
islands.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Steps Toward Independence, 1967-76
Seychelles
Continuous and mounting demands for an increased share in running the
colony's affairs prompted Britain to enact a series of constitutions for
Seychelles, each of which granted important new concessions. In 1967
Britain extended universal suffrage to the colony and established a
governing council to run it, the majority of whose members for the first
time were elected. That year almost 18,000 Seychellois voted, and the DP
emerged in control of the council. In 1970 Britain set up a ministerial
form of government and gave Seychellois the responsibility to administer
all but external affairs, internal security, the civil service, and the
government's broadcasting service and newspaper. The DP won ten seats,
and the SPUP won five in the Legislative Assembly. Mancham became the
islands' chief minister and Ren�, the leader of the opposition.
The opening of an international airport on the east coast of Mah� in
1971 improved contact with the outside world. Before this most journeys
to and from Seychelles had involved long voyages on bimonthly steamers
running between East Africa and India and often required inconvenient
transits in Mombasa and Bombay. Air service had been available only on a
restricted basis at an airstrip used by the United States in building a
satellite station on Mah�. The end of the islands' relative isolation
triggered tourism and concomitant booms in foreign capital investment
and the domestic construction industry. The construction of the
international airport changed the economy from a traditional
agricultural and fishing one within a few years into one where services
accounted for the major portion of employment and gross domestic product
(GDP). The two parties differed on the ways to manage the new
tourist industry and to apportion its benefits. The SPUP favored
controlling the growth of tourism and at the same time developing the
entire economy, whereas the SDP wanted to stimulate the rapid growth of
tourism and to establish the islands as an international financial
center.
Independence from Britain was the dominant issue between the two
parties in the early 1970s, however. The SPUP insisted on cutting the
colony's ties with Britain, whereas Mancham argued for even closer
association. But when it became plain that the independence issue was
popular and Britain showed no interest in retaining close relations, the
SDP also shifted to a proindependence policy. Moreover, the disfavor
with which African and Asian nations viewed colonialism had put the SDP
into disrepute in the region. The SDP won the election campaign in 1974
but the election provoked angry controversy. The SPUP charged that the
results had been rigged; because of the way constituencies had been
demarcated, the SDP won thirteen of the fifteen seats with only 52.4
percent of the vote, lending credibility to the charges. Thereafter,
relations between the two parties, already personalized and bitter,
worsened steadily.
Despite their differences, the two parties formed a coalition under
Mancham to lead Seychelles to independence. Five members from each party
were added to the Legislative Assembly in an attempt to equalize
political representation. One year later, Britain granted the colony
complete independence, and on June 29, 1976, the Republic of Seychelles
became a sovereign nation, with Mancham as president and Ren� as vice
president. As a gesture of goodwill, Britain returned �le Desroches,
the Aldabra Islands, and the Farquhar Islands. In addition, Britain made
a series of grants to the new nation to smooth the transition to an
independent economy. Both parties agreed to support the coalition
government until elections were held in 1979.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Coup by Ren� Supporters, 1977
Seychelles
On June 4-5, 1977, sixty supporters of the SPUP who had been training
in Tanzania staged a coup and overthrew Mancham while he was in London.
Ren�, who denied knowing of the plan, was then sworn in as president
and formed a new government.
A year later, the SPUP combined with several smaller parties and
redesignated itself the Seychelles People's Progressive Front (SPPF), or
simply the Front. A new constitution adopted in 1979 stipulated that the
SPPF be the sole recognized party. The constitution provided for a
strong executive headed by the president and a legislature of
twenty-three elected and two appointed members.
In the first election, held in June 1979, Ren� was the single
candidate for president. He won with 98 percent of the vote. The results
were viewed as a popular endorsement of the socialist policies pursued
by the government in the two years following the coup. The SPPF
proceeded with its program to set minimum wage levels, raise government
salaries, improve housing and health facilities, broaden educational
opportunities, increase social security coverage, and generate
employment in agriculture and fisheries. The lives of most Seychellois
were enhanced, and most citizens appeared to favor the government's
policies.
The decision to turn the nation into a one-party state based on
socialist ideology, as well as certain initiatives of the government,
caused some bitterness, especially among the upper and middle classes.
Censorship of the media and control over public expression were
unpopular. A number of groups attempted to oust the Ren� government
between 1978 and 1987. The most notable was a group of mercenaries who
tried to enter the country in 1981 disguised as tourists from South
Africa. The mercenaries were exposed as they came through customs at the
international airport but most of them, including their leader, Colonel
Michael "Mad Mike" Hoare, escaped after commandeering an Air
India passenger plane to South Africa. Although the South African
government prosecuted and jailed some of the mercenaries for air
hijacking, Hoare testified that South African military and intelligence
officials were involved in the coup attempt. During this period, the
Seychelles government received support from Tanzania, which deployed
troops to the islands to strengthen the government's hand.
Mancham and other exiled opposition figures based principally in
London formed several groups that sought to turn international opinion
against the Ren� government, stigmatizing it as antidemocratic,
procommunist, and pro-Soviet. As part of its efforts to stifle
opposition, the government embarked on a campaign in 1987 to acquire
parcels of land owned by dissident Seychellois living abroad. The
takeovers were not subject to legal challenge, but the amount of
compensation--in the form of bonds payable over twenty years--could be
appealed in court. The government's authoritarianism finally brought it
under growing pressure from its chief patrons--Britain and France.
Finally, in 1991 Ren� and the SPPF consented to liberalize the
political system, inviting opposition leaders to return to Seychelles
and help rewrite the constitution to permit multiparty politics.
Seychelles
Seychelles - GEOGRAPHY
Seychelles
The archipelago consists of 115 islands and thirty prominent rock
formations scattered throughout a self-proclaimed exclusive economic
zone (EEZ) of more than 1.35 million square kilometers of ocean. Some forty islands are granitic and lie in a ninety-kilometer
radius from Mah�, the main island. The remaining islands are coralline,
stretching over a 1,200-kilometer radius from �le aux Vaches in the
northeast to the Aldabra Atoll in the southwest. The islands are all
small-- the aggregate land area is only 444 square kilometers, about
twoand -a-half times the size of Washington, D.C.
Mah� is twenty-five kilometers long and no more than eight
kilometers wide. It contains the capital and only city, Victoria, an
excellent port. Victoria lies approximately 1,600 kilometers east of
Mombasa, Kenya; 2,800 kilometers southwest of Bombay; 1,700 kilometers
north of Mauritius; and 920 kilometers northeast of Madagascar. The only
other important islands by virtue of their size and population are
Praslin and La Digue, situated about thirty kilometers to the northeast
of Mah�.
The granitic islands are the peaks of the submarine Mascarene
Plateau, a continental formation theorized to be either a part of Africa
separated when Asia began to drift away from the original single
continent of Gondwanaland, or the remnants of a microcontinent that
existed up to the beginning of the Tertiary Period, approximately 50
million years ago. The granitic islands are characterized by
boulder-covered hills and mountains as high as 940 meters rising
abruptly from the sea. Elsewhere, narrow coastal plains extend to the
base of the foothills. Extensively developed coral reefs are found
mainly on the east coasts because of the southwest trade winds and
equatorial current. Ninety-nine percent of the population is located on
the granitic islands, and most are on Mah�.
The coralline islands differ sharply from the granitic in that they
are very flat, often rising only a few feet above sea level. They have
no fresh water, and very few have a resident population. Many, like �le
aux Vaches, �le Denis, the Amirante Isles, Platte Island, and Coetivy
Island are sand cays upon which extensive coconut plantations have been
established. Some of the coralline islands consist of uplifted reefs and
atolls covered with stunted vegetation. Several of these islands have
been important breeding grounds for turtles and birds, as well as the
sites of extensive guano deposits, which formerly constituted an
important element of the Seychellois economy but now for the most part
are depleted. Aldabra Islands, the largest coralline atoll with an area
greater than Mah�, is a sanctuary for rare animals and birds.
The uniqueness of the Seychelles' ecology is reflected in the US$1.8
million project of the Global Environment Trust Fund of the World
Bank entitled Biodiversity Conservation and Marine
Pollution Abatement, that began in 1993. The World Bank study for this
project states that the islands contain, out of a total of 1,170
flowering plants, "at least seventy-five species of flowering
plants, fifteen of birds, three of mammals, thirty of reptiles and
amphibians, and several hundred species of snails, insects, spiders and
other invertebrates" found nowhere else. In addition, the waters
contain more than 900 kinds of fish, of which more than one-third are
associated with coral reefs. Specific examples of unique birds are the
black paradise flycatcher, the black parrot, the brush warbler, and a
flightless rail.
As a result of extensive shipping to Seychelles that brings needed
imports and the discharge of commercial tuna fishing, the waters are
becoming polluted. Furthermore, goats brought to Aldabra Islands are
destroying much of the vegetation on which giant turtles, including two
species unique to Seychelles--the green and the hawksbill--feed or seek
shade.
Seychelles began addressing the conservation problem in the late
1960s by creating the Nature Conservancy Commission, later renamed the
Seychelles National Environment Commission. A system of national parks
and animal preserves covering 42 percent of the land area and about
26,000 hectares of the surrounding water areas has been set aside.
Legislation protects wildlife and bans various destructive practices. In
Seychelles' 1990-94 National Development Plan, an effort was made to
include in the appropriate economic sectors of the development plan
environment and natural resources management aspects.
Also connected with ecology is a World Bank project dealing with the
environment and transportation. Launched in 1993 with a loan of US$4.5
million, it is designed to improve the infrastructure of Seychelles with
regard to roads and airports or airstrips so as to encourage tourism as
a source of income, while simultaneously supporting environmental
programs in resource management, conservation, and the elimination of
pollution.
The climate of Seychelles is tropical, having little seasonal
variation. Temperatures on Mah� rarely rise above 29 C. or drop below
24 C. Humidity is high, but its enervating effect is usually ameliorated
by prevailing winds. The southeast monsoon from late May to September
brings cooler weather, and the northwest monsoon from March to May,
warmer weather. High winds are rare inasmuch as most islands lie outside
the Indian Ocean cyclone belt; Mah� suffered the only such storm in its
recorded history in 1862. Mean annual rainfall in Mah� averages 2,880
millimeters at sea level and as high as 3,550 millimeters on the
mountain slopes. Precipitation is somewhat less on the other islands,
averaging as low as 500 millimeters per year on the southernmost coral
islands. Because catchment provides most sources of water in Seychelles,
yearly variations in rainfall or even brief periods of drought can
produce water shortages. Small dams have been built on Mah� since 1969
in an effort to guarantee a reliable water supply, but drought can still
be a problem on Mah� and particularly on La Digue.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Population
Seychelles
According to a July 1994 estimate, the nation's population was
72,113--double what it had been in 1951. The growth rate of 0.8 percent
annually had slackened from the 2.1 percent rate recorded in the late
1970s. The infant mortality rate in 1994 was estimated at 11.7 per 1,000
live births. There were twenty-two births per 1,000 of population
annually and only seven deaths per 1,000; the outward migration rate of
seven per 1,000 helped stem population growth.
About 90 percent of all Seychellois live on Mah�; most of the
remainder live on Praslin (6,000) and La Digue (1,800). The population
of the outer coralline group is only about 400, mostly plantation
workers gathering coconuts for copra. To restrict population growth on
Mah�, the government has encouraged people to move to Praslin and other
islands where water is available.
The birth rate has declined by one-third from thirty-two per 1,000 in
1974 and is relatively lower than most African and Asian countries. By
1980 about one-third of all Seychellois women of reproductive age were
reported to be using some form of contraception, which is considered
unusually high compared with other African and Asian countries. Death
rates are exceptionally low, in part because of the young age structure,
but also because of the availability of free medical services to all
segments of society, and the healthy climate and living conditions. The
average life expectancy at birth in 1994 was 66.1 years for males and
73.4 for females.
<>Ethnic Groups
Updated population figures for Seychelles.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Ethnic Groups
Seychelles
The population is a relatively homogeneous one of mixed European and
African descent, and most citizens consider themselves as Seychellois,
possessors of a unique culture and society. Contrary to other Indian
Ocean island nations, the Asian population is relatively small; it
consists almost entirely of Indians and Chinese. However, the
intermixing of the Indian and Chinese communities with the larger
society is greater than was common elsewhere. Some twenty grand
blanc planter families, descendants of the original French
settlers, represent a separate group but under the socialist government
no longer command the power and social prestige they once had. About
2,000 foreign workers and their families lived in Seychelles in the
early 1990s.
Seychelles.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Languages
Seychelles
Creole, the mother tongue of 94 percent of the nation in 1990, was
adopted as the first official language of the nation in 1981. English is
the second language and French the third, all of them officially
recognized. The increased emphasis on Creole is designed to facilitate
the teaching of reading to primary-level students and to help establish
a distinct culture and heritage. Opponents of the Ren� government
thought it a mistake to formalize Creole, which had no standardized
spelling system. They regarded it as a great advantage for Seychellois
to be bilingual in French and English; treating Creole as a language of
learning would, they feared, be at the expense of French and English.
Creole in Seychelles developed from dialects of southwest France
spoken by the original settlers. It consists basically of a French
vocabulary with a few Malagasy, Bantu, English, and Hindi words, and has
a mixture of Bantu and French syntax. Very little Seychelles Creole
literature exists; development of an orthography of the language was
completed only in 1981. The government-backed Kreol Institute promotes
the use of Creole by developing a dictionary, sponsoring literary
competitions, giving instruction in translation, and preparing course
material to teach Creole to foreigners.
More than one-third of Seychellois can use English, and the great
majority of younger Seychellois can read English, which is the language
of government and commerce. It is the language of the People's Assembly,
although speakers may also use Creole or French. The principal journals
carry articles in all three languages.
Although discouraged by the Ren� regime as a colonialist language,
French continues to carry prestige. It is the language of the Roman
Catholic Church and is used by older people in correspondence and in
formal situations. Some 40 percent of television transmissions are in
French--beamed by satellite to an earth station provided by the French
government--and most Seychellois can speak and understand the language.
Seychelles
Seychelles - SOCIETY
Seychelles
Class and Social Structure
Several indexes of social status operate. The first is color.
Although almost all Seychellois are so racially mixed as to defy
classification, light skin remains a status feature because authority in
Seychelles has been traditionally vested in a white plantation owner or
manager, or later in British officials. Skin color, according to
anthropologist Burton Benedict, is distinguished in Seychelles by the
terms blanc (white), rouge (red), or noir
(black), all of which are applied relatively depending on the speaker's
own pigmentation. Economic achievement and material possessions are
equally important signs of social status.
According to Benedict, Seychellois are highly status conscious and
are anxious to improve their social positions. Possessions, particularly
land and substantial homes, are important indicators of status and
prestige. Fine clothing, cars, jewelry, and watches are similarly
regarded. A willingness to spend freely is, among men, a means to
impress others.
Persons with light skin enjoy greater prestige, but the skin shade
does not reliably determine social status or position of power in
society. Lighter-skinned persons find it easier to advance to managerial
or supervisory positions. It is considered advantageous to marry a
lighter-skinned person, although a wealthier man of dark skin or a
darker-skinned woman with property may not experience such
discrimination. Social tensions based on race are almost unknown, and
persons of differing racial types mix freely in schools, business, and
social gatherings.
A feature of the Seychellois social system is the prevalence of
sexual relationships without formal marriage. Most family units take the
form of de facto unions known as living en m�nage. One result
of this practice is that nearly threefourths of all children born in the
islands are born out of wedlock. Most of these children are, however,
legally acknowledged by their fathers.
The institutionalization of en m�nage unions as
alternatives to legal marriage can be attributed to several factors. The
expense of socially required wedding festivities, trousseaus, and
household furnishings can exceed a year's income for a laborer. Widely
separated economic status of partners, a mother's wish to retain the
earning potential of her son, or a previous marriage by one partner may
be impediments to marriage. The difficulty and expense of divorce also
tend to discourage a legal relationship. Although frowned upon by the
church and civil authorities, en m�nage unions are generally
stable and carry little stigma for either partner or for their children.
Among women of higher status, prevailing standards of social
respectability require that they be married to the men with whom they
are living. Sexual fidelity is not as likely to be demanded of husbands,
who often enter into liaisons with lower-class women.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Status of Women
Seychelles
Women enjoy the same legal, political, economic, and social rights as
men. Women form nearly half of the enrollment at the prestigious
Seychelles Polytechnic, the highest level of education on the islands.
In 1994 two women held cabinet posts-- the minister of foreign affairs,
planning, and environment and the minister of agriculture and marine
resources--and women filled other major positions. In the early 1990s,
many SPPF branch leaders were women, although in government as a whole
women were underrepresented. According to the Department of State's Human
Rights Report for 1993, "The Geneva-based Inter-Parliamentary
union cited Seychelles as having the world's highest percentage of
female representation in its parliament (at 45.8 percent of the total
delegates."
Seychellois society is essentially matriarchal. Mothers tend to be
dominant in the household, controlling most current expenditures and
looking after the interests of the children. Men are important for their
earning ability, but their domestic role is relatively peripheral. Older
women can usually count on financial support from family members living
at home or contributions from the earnings of grown children.
Seychelles
Seychelles - RELIGION
Seychelles
Some 90 percent of the population was Roman Catholic as of 1992. The
initial white settlers in Seychelles were Roman Catholics, and the
country has remained so, despite ineffective British efforts to
establish Protestantism in the islands during the nineteenth century.
The nation has been a bishopric since 1890, and mission schools had a
virtual monopoly on education until the government took over such
schools in 1944. Sunday masses are well attended, and religious holidays
are celebrated throughout the nation both as opportunities for the
devout to practice their faith and as social events. Practicing
Catholicism, like speaking French, confers a certain status by
associating its adherents with the white settlers from France.
Approximately 7 percent of Seychellois are Anglicans--most coming
from families converted by missionaries in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. Evangelical Protestant churches are active and
growing, among them Pentecostals and Seventh Day Adventists. Some 2
percent of the population are adherents of other faiths, including
Hinduism, Buddhism, and Islam. No temples or mosques, however, exist on
the islands. No restrictions are imposed on religious worship by any of
the denominations.
Although clergy and civil authorities disapprove, many Seychellois
see little inconsistency between their orthodox religious observance and
belief in magic, witchcraft, and sorcery. It is common to consult a
local seer--known as a bonhomme de bois or a bonne femme de
bois--for fortune-telling or to obtain protective amulets or
charms, called gris-gris, to bring harm to enemies.
Seychelles
Seychelles - EDUCATION
Seychelles
Until the mid-1800s, little formal education was available in
Seychelles. Both the Roman Catholic and Anglican churches opened mission
schools in 1851. The missions continued to operate the schools--the
teachers were monks and nuns from abroad--even after the government
became responsible for them in 1944. After a technical college opened in
1970, a supply of locally trained teachers became available, and many
new schools were established. Since 1981 a system of free education has
been in effect requiring attendance by all children in grades one to
nine, beginning at age five. Ninety percent of all children also attend
nursery school at age four.
The literacy rate for school-aged children had risen to more than 90
percent by the late 1980s. Many older Seychellois had not been taught to
read or write in their childhood, but adult education classes helped
raise adult literacy from 60 percent to a claimed 85 percent in 1991.
Children are first taught to read and write in Creole. Beginning in
grade three, English is used as a teaching language in certain subjects.
French is introduced in grade six. After completing six years of primary
school and three years of secondary school, at age fifteen students who
wish to continue attend a National Youth Service (NYS) program. Students
in the NYS live at an NYS village at Port Launnay on the northwest coast
of Mah�, wearing special brown and beige uniforms. In addition to
academic training, the students receive practical instruction in
gardening, cooking, housekeeping, and livestock raising--one of the aims
of the program is to reduce youth unemployment. They are expected to
produce much of their own food, cook their own meals, and do their
laundry. Self-government is practiced through group sessions and
committees.
From the time the NYS program was instituted in 1981, it met with
heated opposition and remained highly unpopular. Students spend the
entire period away from home, with parental visits permitted only at
designated times at intervals of several months. Many consider the
quality of education to be inferior; indoctrination in the socialist
policies of the SPPF is part of the curriculum. Nevertheless, failure to
attend the NYS made it difficult to proceed to more advanced study. In
1991 the NYS program was reduced from two years to one year. The total
enrollment in that year was 1,394, with roughly equal numbers of boys
and girls. Those who leave school but do not participate in the NYS can
volunteer for a government-administered six-month work program,
receiving a training stipend below the minimum wage.
After completing their NYS program, students could attend Seychelles
Polytechnic (1,600 students in 1991) for preuniversity studies or other
training. In 1993, responding to popular pressure, the government
eliminated the requirement of NYS participation in order to enter the
Polytechnic. However, it strongly encouraged students to complete NYS
before beginning to work at age eighteen. The largest number of students
were in teacher training (302), business studies (255), humanities and
science (226), and hotels and tourism (132). No opportunities for higher
education are available on the islands. Instead, university and higher
professional courses are usually pursued through various British, United
States, and French scholarship programs.
Seychelles has received funds for developing its educational programs
from several multinational sources. These include a grant from the
Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in 1988 and a
US$9.4 million loan from the African Development Bank in November 1991.
Seychelles
Seychelles - HEALTH AND WELFARE
Seychelles
Health and nutritional conditions are remarkably good, approaching
those of a developed country. The favorable projections of life
expectancy are attributable in large degree to a salubrious climate, an
absence of infectious diseases commonly associated with the tropics
(such as malaria, yellow fever, sleeping sickness, and cholera), and the
availability of free medical and hospital services to all Seychellois.
The National Medical Service operated by the Ministry of Health
provides free medical treatment to all citizens. The principal medical
institution is the 421-bed Victoria Hospital, which has medical,
surgical, psychiatric, pediatric, and maternity departments. Five other
hospitals and clinics have a combined 113 beds in general wards, and a
psychiatric hospital has sixty beds. In addition, a total of twenty-five
outpatient clinics exist on Mah�, Praslin, and La Digue. Most of the
fortyeight doctors and ten dentists come from overseas; few Seychellois
who go abroad for training return to practice medicine.
Improvements in prenatal and postnatal care since the late 1970s have
brought the infant mortality rate down from more than fifty per 1,000
live births in 1978, to an estimated 11.7 in 1994, a rate comparable to
that of Western Europe. Some 90 percent of protein in the diet is
derived from fish, which, along with lentils, rice, and fruits, gives
most families access to a reasonably nutritious diet. Nevertheless, many
prevailing health problems, especially among children, result from
poverty, limited education, poor housing, polluted water, and unbalanced
diets.
Local threats to health include intestinal parasites such as hookworm
and tapeworm. Venereal diseases are widespread, and local programs to
contain their spread have been described as ineffective. Dengue fever
epidemics--although not fatal--have periodically struck large segments
of the population, causing severe discomfort and unpleasant
aftereffects. Alcoholism is a serious problem, and narcotic use--mainly
of marijuana and heroin--is beginning to appear among the young. In late
November 1992, the Ministry of Health confirmed the first case of
acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS); a year previously the
ministry had announced that twenty people tested positively for the
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
Under the social security law, employers and employees contribute to
a national pension program that gives retirees a modest pension.
Self-employed persons contribute by paying 15 percent of gross earnings.
The government also has a program to provide low-cost housing, housing
loans, and building plots, although the program is said to reflect
favoritism on behalf of SPPF supporters.
Seychelles
Seychelles - THE ECONOMY
Seychelles
A notable feature of the Seychelles economy was the high per capita
GDP of US$5,900 in 1992, some fifteen times the average of sub-Saharan
Africa. Total GDP was estimated at US$407 million in 1992. Economic
growth, which had proceeded at a strong 5 to 6 percent annually since
the mid-1980s, resumed in 1992 at an estimated rate of 4 percent.
The major source of economic activity is the tourist industry and
tourist-related services in terms of employment, foreign earnings,
construction, and banking. Although earnings from the tourism sector are
impressive, providing about 50 percent of GDP, they are offset by the
need to import large amounts of food, fuels, construction materials, and
equipment, costing some 70 percent of tourism income. Gross tourism
foreign exchange earnings in 1993 were SRe607 million. Moreover, the possibilities for expanding
tourism are limited, and it is vulnerable to unpredictable shifts in
demand, as occurred in 1991 when the Persian Gulf War contributed to a
sharp decline from 103,900 tourists in 1990 to 90,000 in 1991. By 1993
there was a strong recovery in the tourist trade, bringing more than
116,000 visitors.
Hoping to avoid overdependence on tourism, the government has
attempted to diversify economic activity by encouraging new industries
and revitalizing traditional exports. Production of food and other items
is being emphasized to reduce the heavy burden of imports needed to
sustain tourism. Development of the nation's marine resources remains a
principal governmental goal, pursued by expanding indigenous coastal
fisheries and by profiting from fees and services provided to foreign
fishing fleets operating in Seychelles' EEZ. Small traditional fishing
accounted for less than 3 percent of GDP in the early 1990s but provided
jobs for about 1,500 persons and growing foreign exchange earnings.
The Seychelles' traditional marketings of copra and cinnamon bark had
declined to an insignificant level by 1991. The government's goal of
achieving 60 percent self-sufficiency in food has not been realized
although its efforts have resulted in increases in fruit, vegetable,
meat (mainly chicken and pork), and tea production.
Parastatal (mixed government and private) companies proliferated in
many sectors of the economy under the Ren� regime. State-owned and
parastatal companies accounted for more than half the country's GDP and
about two-thirds of formal employment. The parastatals enjoyed mixed
success, and by 1992 the government had begun to divest itself of
selected enterprises.
Seychelles traditionally has run a large trade deficit because of the
need to import nearly all manufactured and most agricultural
commodities. Much of the gap has been covered by revenues from the
tourism sector and to a lesser extent by remittances from Seychellois
workers abroad and by overseas loans and grants.
Seychelles has been relatively successful in containing inflation.
The retail price index, which includes some goods and services whose
prices are set by the government, rose by 3.3 percent in 1992 and 4.0
percent in 1993. The generally stable price environment has resulted in
part from wage discipline, the weakness in world oil prices, and a
policy of importing from countries with low prices, including South
Africa, whose currency has depreciated steadily against the Seychelles
rupee.
To support its anti-inflationary strategy, the government has pursued
a liberal exchange rate policy. Since 1979 the rupee has been pegged to
the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) special drawing rights (SDR).
The rupee's relative stability has contributed to the stability of
domestic prices.
Seychelles
Seychelles - THE ECONOMY - Government Role
Seychelles
Under the socialist policies of President Ren�, the government has
taken a leading role in developing the national economy. Beginning in
1978, the Ministry of Planning and Development has drawn up very
detailed "rolling" five-year development plans, which are
updated and extended every year. The Ministry of Finance is responsible
for economic decisions and budgetary policy. A separate Monetary
Authority supervises the banking system and manages the money supply.
Although foreign banks operate branches in Seychelles, the government
owns the two local banks--the Development Bank of Seychelles, which
mobilizes resources to fund development programs, and the Seychelles
Savings Bank, a bank for savings and current accounts.
The expansion of parastatal companies since 1979, when the first such
institution was created, has had primary economic significance. By 1988
the number of parastatals had reached thirty-five, but in 1994 there
were indications that the government's more liberal economic policy
would probably reduce the role and number of parastatals. Among the most
important organizations of the public sector is the Seychelles National
Investment Corporation, whose role is to promote economic development in
areas neglected by private enterprise or to become a major stockholder
in private companies that encounter economic difficulties. The most
powerful of the state enterprises is the Seychelles Marketing Board
(SMB), which is the sole importer of key commodities, exercises controls
over other imports, and regulates prices, production, and distribution
of most goods and services.
The state-owned Seychelles Timber Company has responsibility for
reforestation and for operating the government sawmill at Grande Anse.
The fishing Development Company controls industrial tuna fishing and the
tuna cannery operated as a joint venture with France. Air Seychelles, a
parastatal, flies both international and interisland routes, making a
critical contribution to the tourist routes, making a critical
contribution to the tourist industry. The Islands Development Company
(IDC) was established in 1980 to develop agriculture, tourism, and guano
production on ten of the outlying islands-- guano deposits have since
been depleted. A hotel complex on le Desroches is among the projects
conducted by the IDC. Opened in 1988, the Desroches resort is managed by
another parastatal, Islands Resorts. A US$12 million shrimp farming
project on Coetivy Island remained in the final development stage in
1992. The high initial investment and heavy transport costs raised
doubts about its viability, although a study has indicated that about 8
tons of shrimp could be caught annually in the area.
Despite the government's strong involvement in the economy, it has
never imposed a policy of forced nationalization. Rather, the government
encourages foreign investment, preferably as joint ventures.
Concurrently with the political liberalization in 1992, the government
has attempted to strengthen the private sector, announcing measures to
attract investment and planning to divest some state-owned companies.
Among companies scheduled for privatization are the agro-industrial
division of the SMB and Stationery, Printing, and Computer Equipment, to
be sold as three separate enterprises. A parastatal holding 65 percent
of Seychelles hotel assets reportedly is ready to sell some hotels or to
privatize their management. Private investors nevertheless remain
cautious because of the continued high level of state economic control.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Economic Development
Seychelles
The government has detailed its economic development targets in
successive five-year plans. The plan for 1985-89 emphasized tourism,
agriculture, and fisheries. It proposed to improve the balance of
payments by achieving 60 percent self-sufficiency in food and by
stimulating tourism. Improved productivity, increased exports, and a
lowering of the unemployment level were additional aims. The 1990-94
plan stressed the need to attract foreign investment and the need for
greater food self-sufficiency. A tenyear plan for protecting the
environment was supported by a pledge of US$40 million from World Bank
donors. The total projected investment was SRe4,206 million in constant
1989 prices, of which 26 percent would be funded by the public sector.
It was not expected, however, that the investment goals would be
realized. Capital spending was aimed at improved living standards--water
supplies, waste disposal, and housing. Tourism and related investments
were also regarded as priorities.
An ambitious government initiative is the East Coast Development Plan
to reclaim land on Mah� for residential and commercial construction.
Some 800 new homes are to be built to ease the housing shortage among
ordinary Seychellois. In addition, part of the area will be reserved for
luxury housing and tourist facilities. In 1993 the government announced
that it would seek private sector investment to help complete this major
project.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Labor
Seychelles
The government is the nation's largest employer, providing jobs for
38 percent of the wage-earning labor force in 1991. The parastatal
sector employed a further 26 percent, leaving only 36 percent of workers
in the private sector. The total labor force was about 29,600 in 1991;
some 19 percent were domestic workers, self-employed, or family workers.
The remainder were in formal wage employment. Hotel and restaurant
workers formed the largest single category (14.1 percent), followed by
transportation (13.8 percent), manufacturing (11.2 percent), public
administration (10.9 percent), and agriculture (9.1 percent).
The government establishes official minimum wages depending upon job
classification, although most jobs are paid at well above the rates set.
Average monthly earnings as of mid-1992 were about SRe2,750 in the
government and parastatal sectors and SRe2,260 in the private sector.
The differential was caused by high 1992 salary increases to government
and parastatal workers amounting to 12.3 percent and 14.3 percent,
respectively, which the private sector could not match. The Central Bank
of Seychelles has noted that wage inflation, which averaged 10.8 percent
for the entire labor force, greatly exceeded the retail price inflation
of 3.3 percent and could not be justified by corresponding productivity
gains. The bank feared that the government's salary awards would add to
existing pressures on the country's cost base, its external
competitiveness, and its external accounts. , which is controlled by the
SPPF. All workers are members because a percentage of their social
security contributions are earmarked for union dues. Workers can elect
their own shop stewards, but candidates are screened by the NWU
executive secretariat, which can dismiss any elected shop steward.
Workers can strike only with the permission of the SPPF Central
Committee. Nevertheless, two labor disputes occurred in the changed 1992
political environment. Workers in the main electrical generating plant
organized a brief shutdown, winning increased allowances in their
compensation packages, and stevedores struck for better conditions and
higher compensation. To avoid disruption at a critical time for the
industrial fisheries sector, the government essentially met the
stevedores' demands.
In November 1993, the National Assembly passed the Trade Union
Industrial Act, which gave Seychellois workers the right to join and to
form their own unions. Any such unions, however, may not compete with
the overall NWU. One independent union was formed in late 1993.
In addition to approving collective bargaining agreements and
reviewing private wage scales, the Ministry of Employment and Social
Affairs can enforce employment conditions and benefits. With many free
or subsidized public services, notably education and health, even
workers at the low end of the pay scale can sustain their families at a
basic level. Even so, many families rely on two or more incomes to deal
with the high price structure.
The government has set a legal work week of forty or thirtyfive
hours, depending on the occupation. With overtime, the work week may not
exceed sixty hours. Workers are entitled to a thirty-minute break each
day and twenty-one days of paid annual leave. Comprehensive occupational
health and safety regulations are enforced through regular workplace
visits.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Agriculture
Seychelles
The Ministry of Agriculture and Marine Resources in 1993 gave up the
management of five state-owned farms, which were divided into small
plots and leased to individuals. In addition, the agricultural sector
consisted of state farms of the Seychelles Agricultural Development
Company (Sadeco) and the outer islands managed by the IDC; three other
large holdings producing mainly coconuts, cinnamon, and tea; about 250
families engaged in fulltime production of foodstuffs; and an estimated
700 families working on a part-time basis. Many households cultivate
gardens and raise livestock for home consumption.
The total cultivable area of the islands is only about 400 hectares.
Although rainfall is abundant, wet and dry seasons are sharply defined.
Better irrigation and drainage systems are needed to improve food crops.
The government has taken various measures to reduce dependency on
imported foods, including deregulating production and marketing and
reducing the trades tax on fertilizers and equipment. As a result,
vegetable and fruit production climbed from 505 tons in 1990 to 1,170
tons in 1992. This increase failed to be matched by a commensurate
decrease in imports of fruits and vegetables, which reached 3,471 tons
in 1992. Local consumption had apparently increased, and substitution
between imported and domestic foodstuffs was possible only to a limited
degree. In most cases, imported produce is significantly cheaper in
spite of air freight, import taxes, and other costs, necessitating a
high import markup by the SMB to prevent disruption of domestic
production. Neither rice, a dietary staple, nor other grains can be
grown on the islands.
The expansion of livestock production is hampered by encroachment of
housing and other development on agricultural land as well as by
increased labor and animal feed costs. The number of cattle slaughtered
in 1992 (329 head) was virtually unchanged from five years earlier. The
slaughter of pigs (4,598) was about 45 percent higher than 1987, and
chicken production (439,068) had risen by 60 percent.
The two traditional export crops of copra--dried coconut meat from
which an oil is produced--and cinnamon have declined greatly because of
the high cost of production and pressure from low-cost competitors on
the international market. Vanilla, formerly important, is produced on a
very small scale. Tea grown on the misty slopes of Mah� is a more
recent plantation crop, serving mainly the local market.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Fishing
Seychelles
The fisheries sector is divided into two distinct categories:
traditional fishing by a domestic fleet of some 400 vessels; and
industrial tuna fishing by foreign vessels, which began to develop in
the mid-1970s and has emerged as a major revenue source. The domestic
inshore fleet consists mainly of open boats equipped with inboard or
outboard engines, operating within a radius of sixteen to forty-eight
kilometers of the main islands. Domestic offshore operations on banks
surrounding the Mah� group and the Amirantes Isles are conducted by
handlines from larger boats with sleeping quarters. Most of the catch is
frozen. The fish division of SMB bought and distributed fish landed on
the three main islands to avoid serious price fluctuations. An export
trade in the local catch developed after the opening of the
international airport made possible deliveries to Europe and other
markets.
Local consumption of fish traditionally has been high, and has been
estimated at eighty-five kilograms per capita annually in the early
1990s. The local catch is also an important menu item at the tourist
hotels. The domestic fisheries catch reached 5,734 tons in 1992, about
10 percent of which was accounted for by a new industrial fishing
venture, the P�cheur Breton mothership-dory enterprise.
Beyond 100 kilometers from the Seychelles coasts, fishing is
conducted by some fifty-five French and Spanish purse seiners based at
Victoria. (The Spanish vessels briefly shifted their base to Mombasa in
1992 but returned when the Seychelles government reduced its port
charges.) Some 160,000 tons of tuna were transshipped through Victoria
in 1992, of which 45,000 tons were reported by the vessels' owners to
have been fished within Seychelles' EEZ. The Seychelles authorities had
no way of verifying these claims.
In 1991 Seychelles, Mauritius, and Madagascar formed the Tuna Fishing
Association to promote their interests. In addition, a series of
three-year agreements granted European Community (EC) vessels the right to fish in the Seychelles EEZ. The
fourth such agreement, signed in early 1993, was expected to generate
US$13.5 million annually. The islands' economy also benefit from the
resulting business activity at Victoria in the form of port services,
stevedoring, and ship chandling. The Seychelles government had leased
one purse seiner to profit more directly from the tuna industry, and is
building ten seiners, but the project has encountered financial
difficulties.
In 1992 the Seychelles Fishing Authority issued 292 licenses to
long-lines fishing vessels mainly from Taiwan and the Republic of Korea
(South Korea). These vessels make few calls at Victoria, offloading
their catches onto motherships in mid-ocean. Seychelles is unable to
carry out naval and air surveillance of possible illegal fishing,
especially in more remote parts of the EEZ. There is a strong
presumption, however, that unauthorized use is being made of its fishing
grounds.
The tuna canning plant opened in 1987, with 70 percent of its capital
of Seychelles origin and 30 percent invested by a French cooperative;
the plant is designed to process 8,000 to 10,000 tons of fish a year. It
employs 425 people, mostly women, and has brought a rapid growth of
export earnings, reaching US$12.3 million by 1991. The net gain in
balance of payments was less because the operation required some
imports, notably the cans, which could not be produced domestically.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Oil
Seychelles
Seychelles depends on imported petroleum to meet its domestic power
requirements. Following the increase in oil prices in 1990, fuel
accounted for nearly 8.6 percent of the nation's import bill, exclusive
of reexports. The possibility of commercially exploitable offshore oil
led to the granting of exploration rights in 1977 to a consortium headed
by Amoco Oil Company. Amoco later bought out its partners and acquired
additional exploration rights but ceased drilling in 1986 when all of
its test wells proved dry.
The government embarked on a new program to interest oil companies in
exploration in 1985 with technical assistance from Norway in preparing
feasibility studies. In 1987 the British Enterprise Oil Company and the
United States Texaco Corporation, obtained rights for areas south and
west of Mah�. After completing promising seismic studies, Enterprise
announced plans to begin drilling in 1995. The Seychelles government
retains rights to participate in joint development of the concession if
commercial quantities of oil are found. In August 1990, Ultramar Canada,
Inc. stated that it had an agreement to search 10,200 square kilometers
of seabed northeast of Mah�.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Manufacturing
Seychelles
Owing to the small size of the local market and the lack of raw
materials, manufacturing occurs on a very limited scale. As of 1991,
only 2,563 persons were employed in a total of eightyeight enterprises,
twelve of them parastatals. Most employed fewer than ten people, and
only five firms employed as many as 100. A number are
import-substitution industries, the largest of which is a brewery and
soft drink plant. Other firms include cigarette, clothing, paint,
plastics, and furniture factories, cinnamon and coconut processing
plants, and some handicrafts catering to the tourist industry. To
encourage foreign interest in the manufacturing sector, the government
has developed a new investment code guaranteeing full repatriation of
profits and capital, protection against nationalization, free import of
capital goods, and other incentives. The government reserves the right,
however, to require that the state share an interest in larger-scale
industrial activities.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Tourism
Seychelles
Tourism is the most important nongovernment sector of the economy.
About 15 percent of the formal work force is directly employed in
tourism, and employment in construction, banking, transportation, and
other activities is closely tied to the tourist industry. Foreign
exchange gross earnings from tourism were SRe607 million in 1993. The
direct contribution of the tourism sector to GDP was estimated at 50
percent, and it provides about 70 percent of total foreign exchange
earnings. Although difficult to measure, the import content of tourism
expenditures is high, so net tourism earnings are significantly lower.
The tourist industry was born with the completion of the
international airport in 1971, advancing rapidly to a level of 77,400
arrivals in 1979. After slackening in the early 1980s, growth was
restored through the introduction of casinos, vigorous advertising
campaigns, and more competitive pricing. After a decline to 90,050 in
1991 because of the Persian Gulf War, the number of visitors rose to
more than 116,000 in 1993. In 1991 France was the leading source of
tourists, followed by Britain, Germany, Italy, and South Africa. Europe
provided 80 percent of the total tourists and Africa--mostly South
Africa and Reunion-- most of the remainder. European tourists are
considered the most lucrative in terms of length of stay and per capita
spending.
Under the 1990-94 development plan, which emphasizes that the growth
of tourism should not be at the expense of the environment, the number
of beds on the islands of Mah�, Praslin, and La Digue is to be limited
to 4,000. Increases in total capacity are to be achieved by developing
the outer islands. To avoid future threat to the natural attractions of
the islands, 150,000 tourists per year are regarded as the ultimate
ceiling. The higher cost of accommodations and travel, deficiencies in
services and maintenance of facilities, and a limited range of
diversions handicap Seychelles in attracting vacationers at the expense
of other Indian Ocean tourist destinations.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Foreign Trade
Seychelles
Seychelles has experienced recurrent foreign exchange problems
because of its limited export potential and fluctuations in tourist
traffic. Growing national income has been accompanied by pressures for
increased imports of manufactured consumer goods that cannot be produced
domestically. In 1991 the government took measures to restrain imports,
and in 1992 it imposed surcharges on luxury goods, in addition to taking
other actions to restrict domestic spending.
Until 1987 the nation's principal export was fresh and frozen fish,
followed by high-quality copra, for which Pakistan, the leading
importer, paid premium prices. Cinnamon bark and shark fins were the
only other exports of consequence. Reexports, mainly of tourist-related
duty-free items and petroleum products for aircraft and ships, were
considerably higher than earnings from merchandise exports. From 1987
onward, canned tuna dominated the islands' export trade. With a value of
SRe64.1 million, canned tuna constituted 73 percent of all domestic
exports in 1991. Fresh and frozen fish exports brought SRe17.7 million,
but copra and cinnamon had shrunk to insignificant levels.
France had been the principal destination of Seychelles exports for
many years, sometimes absorbing more than 60 percent of the islands'
products. In 1991 the Seychelles trade pattern shifted sharply in favor
of Britain (52.7 percent of total exports), followed by France (22.8
percent), and Reunion (13.6 percent). Both Reunion and Mauritius are
leading customers for frozen fish.
Seychelles imports a broad range of foods, manufactured goods,
machinery, and transportation equipment. The largest single category is
petroleum fuels and lubricants, although much of this is reexported
through servicing of ships and aircraft. Seychelles' main suppliers in
1991 were Bahrain, South Africa, Britain, Singapore, and France. Because
of its high import dependence, the country's visible trade is always
heavily in deficit. In 1991 its total of domestic exports and reexports
(SR258 million) was only 28 percent of total imports (SR910 million).
Gross receipts from tourism usually cover some 60 percent of imports but
fall short of bridging the gap in the balance of payments. In 1993
Seychelles joined the Preferential Trade Area for Eastern and Southern
Africa, which should improve its trade because of greater currency
convertibility, particularly with Mauritius.
Seychelles
Seychelles - GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
Seychelles
Between 1979 and 1993, Seychelles was governed under a single-party
socialist system. President Ren�, who had assumed power in a military
coup d'�tat in 1977, had been the sole candidate in the presidential
elections of 1979, 1984, and 1989, each time winning an affirmative vote
of more than 90 percent.
The SPPF agreed to relinquish its monopoly of power in December 1991
when a party congress approved Ren�'s proposal to allow other political
groups to be registered. Groups receiving sufficient popular support
were permitted to take part in revising the constitution. A first effort
to produce a new constitution failed in a referendum in November 1992,
but after further negotiations constitutional changes were approved the
following June. Multiparty elections followed in July 1993 in which Ren�
and the SPPF were again victorious.
<>Governmental System, 1977-93
<>Return to a Multiparty System
<>Opposition Movements and Interest Groups
<>Media
<>Legal System and Civil Rights
<>FOREIGN RELATIONS
Seychelles
Seychelles - Governmental System, 1977-93
Seychelles
Under the constitution that took effect in 1979, all political
activity, in particular that regarding the formulation and debate of
policy, was conducted under the auspices of the Front. The party
constitution was attached as a supplement to the national constitution.
The president, as head of state and commander in chief of the armed
forces, was nominated by the national congress of the SPPF and stood for
election on a yes-no basis. All Seychellois aged seventeen or older
could vote. The president served a five-year term and could be elected
no more than three times in succession.
The constitution provided few checks on executive powers. The
president appointed a cabinet without review by the People's Assembly.
The latter consisted of twenty-three members elected for four-year terms
from twenty-three constituencies, plus two members named by the
president to represent the inner and outer islands. The president
appointed the chair of the assembly. The SPPF selected candidates for
assembly seats. In some constituencies, only one candidate was
nominated, but in others the voters could choose from as many as three
SPPF nominees. The legislature exercised no independent role, simply
enacting into law bills proposed by the executive branch. Debates on
issues occurred and were reported in the media, but criticism of the
president or the government was not tolerated.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Return to a Multiparty System
Seychelles
Several factors contributed to the shift away from singleparty rule.
Political changes in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, and a
movement toward multiparty systems in Africa, left Seychelles
conspicuously out of step with trends in the rest of the world. Britain
and France trimmed their foreign aid programs, tying future aid to
progress on the political front. Exiled Seychelles political figures
were active in drawing attention to the autocratic features of the
Seychelles system. In addition, domestic
opposition to domination by the SPPF had become increasingly open by
1991. The Roman Catholic Church, the business community, and even a few
figures in the SPPF had begun to express dissatisfaction. Embryonic
local government had been introduced by combining the role of local
party branch leaders and district councillors, but this step failed to
satisfy sentiment for a more open and democratic system.
On December 3, 1991, at a special congress of the SPPF, President Ren�
announced that, beginning in January 1992, political groupings of at
least 100 members would be permitted to register and that multiparty
elections for a commission to participate in drafting a new constitution
would be held six months later. In April 1992, former president James
Mancham returned from Britain to lead the New Democratic Party (NDP),
which tended to represent the commercial and wealthy in the election
campaign. Six additional parties were also registered. In the voting for
the constitutional commission, the SPPF gained 58.4 percent of the votes
and the NDP, 33.7 percent. None of the other parties gained enough to be
represented, although the most successful of these, the Seychellois
Party (Parti Seselwa) led by Wavel Ramkalanan and calling for restoring
free enterprise, was granted one seat on the commission. As a prelude to
the constitutional conference, in September 1992 the government ended
the eleven-year state of emergency declared after the 1981 attempted
mercenary coup.
During the subsequent constitutional conference, the NDP delegation
withdrew, objecting to closed sessions and claiming that the SPPF was
forcing through an undemocratic document that reinforced the wide powers
of the current president. The SPPF members, who constituted a quorum,
continued the commission's work, and the draft constitution was
submitted for popular referendum in November 1992.
The vote in favor of the new constitution was 53.7 percent, well
short of the 60 percent needed for acceptance. The NDP campaigned for
rejection of the draft, claiming that it would perpetuate domination by
the president. The draft stipulated that half of the assembly seats
would be allocated by proportional representation based on the
presidential election results, thus guaranteeing the president a
majority. The Roman Catholic Church also objected to the legalization of
abortion called for in the document.
In January 1993, the constitutional commission reconvened to resume
negotiations on a new draft constitution. The proceedings were conducted
more openly, live television coverage was permitted, and interest groups
could submit proposals. The new constitution, which had the support of
both the SPPF and the NDP, was approved by 73.9 percent of the voters in
a second referendum held on June 18, 1993. The text emphasized human
rights and the separation of executive, legislative, and judicial
powers. The presidency was again limited to three terms of five years
each. The constitution provided for a leader of the opposition to be
elected by the National Assembly. The assembly consisted of thirty-three
members, twenty-two of them elected, and eleven designated by
proportional representation.
In the first election under the new constitution, held on July 23,
1993, Ren� was again elected president with 60 percent of the vote.
Mancham of the NDP received 37 percent, and Philippe Boull� of the
United Opposition Party, a coalition of the smaller parties, received 3
percent. Of the elective seats for the National Assembly, SPPF
candidates won twenty-one and the NDP, one. Of the total thirty-three
seats in the assembly, twentyseven went to the SPPF, five to the NDP,
and one to the United Opposition Party.
Although Seychelles security forces intimidated some antiSPPF
candidates in 1992, no coercion was reported during the 1993 voting.
Fears of loss of jobs and benefits are believed to have played a part in
the SPPF victory, however.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Opposition Movements and Interest Groups
Seychelles
Most domestic critics of the government had been silenced by
harassment or had been forced into exile during the period of one-party
rule from 1977 to 1991. Opposition groups, about which little
information is available, included the Movement for Resistance
(Mouvement pour la R�sistance), the Seychelles Liberation Committee,
and the Seychelles Popular Anti-Marxist Front. Government control over
the press and radio and television broadcasts also made it difficult for
any opposition views to be heard, although newspapers printed by exiles
were smuggled in from abroad or received by fax. The Roman Catholic and
Anglican churches were allowed to comment on social and political issues
during broadcasts of religious services, which each was allowed on
alternate Sundays. The Roman Catholic bishop exercised a degree of
influence and was regarded as one of the few checks against abuse by the
Ren� regime.
Until 1992 the Seychelles government tolerated no manifestation of
domestic opposition, and opposition figures were forced to carry on
their anti-SPPF campaigns from abroad, mainly in London. One exile
leader, G�rard Hoarau, head of the Seychelles National Movement, was
assassinated in 1985 in a crime that the British police were unable to
solve.
The leading member of the exile community, however, was Mancham,
former head of the Seychelles Democratic Party who was overthrown as
president in 1977. In April 1992, Mancham returned to Seychelles to
revive his political movement. Since 1989 Mancham had mounted what he
called a "fax revolution" from London by sending facsimile
messages designed to stir up opposition to the 200 fax machines in
Seychelles. His program, entitled the Crusade for Democracy, was
intended to restore democracy to Seychelles peacefully. Data transmitted
by fax included accounts of human rights violations in Seychelles and
charges of corruption of the Ren� regime. Ren�'s government made it
illegal to circulate a seditious fax in Seychelles, but fax owners
eluded this regulation by photocopying the original before turning it in
to the police. Ren� then sought to counter the criticism through a
government media campaign, but in so doing he admitted the existence of
an opposition in Seychelles. The end result was that he was obliged to
give way and allow multiparty democracy to exist. Ren� recognized
Mancham as official Leader of the Opposition, and Mancham received a
salary as a government employee with various perquisites.
A third opposition leader was Anglican clergyman Wavel Ramkalanan. In
a 1990 radio sermon, Ramkalanan denounced violations of human rights by
the Ren� government. Although forced off the air, he continued to
distribute copies of his sermons charging government corruption.
Ramkalanan formed the Parti Seselwa when the government lifted its
political ban but obtained only a 4.4 percent return in the 1992
election for delegates. The Parti Seselwa and five other newly
registered parties allied themselves with Mancham's NDP but later broke
away to form the United Opposition Party, charging Mancham with being
too willing to compromise with Ren� and the SPPF.
The Roman Catholic Church continued to wage opposition to the Ren�
regime. In early 1993, the Roman Catholic bishop appeared before the
constitutional commission several times to complain about past human
rights violations by the Ren� government. He also demanded that the new
constitution adopt a ban on abortion and provide for religious education
in the schools.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Media
Seychelles
During the rule of Ren� and the SPPF through 1991, political
expression was tightly controlled. The only daily newspaper was the
government-owned Seychelles Nation, which had an estimated
circulation of 4,000. Published by the Department of Information and
Telecommunications, it has a government bias and does not present
independent views. L'�cho des �les, a Roman Catholic weekly
that touches on current events, is not subject to censorship and often
carries views critical of the government. Its circulation is about
2,000. After the political liberalization of 1992, several opposition
journals appeared and were allowed to publish without government
harassment. Foreign publications are imported and sold without
interference.
The state-owned Seychelles Broadcasting Corporation (SBC), previously
closely controlled, was granted autonomous status in 1992. Television
and radio continued to show a pro-SPPF bias but began to broadcast
material critical of the government in their news. Party political
broadcasts were permitted, and SBC coverage of the campaigns and
constitutional deliberations was followed closely.
Seychelles
Seychelles - Legal System and Civil Rights
Seychelles
The three-tiered judicial system consists of magistrates' or small
claims courts, the Supreme (or trial) Court, and the Court of Appeal.
The Court of Appeal hears appeals from the Supreme Court in both civil
and criminal cases. The Supreme Court has jurisdiction of first instance
as well as acting as an appeals court from the magistrates' courts. The
system is based on English common law, with influences of the Napoleonic
Code (e.g., in tort and contract matters), and customary law. Criminal
cases are heard in magistrates' courts or the Supreme Court depending on
the seriousness of the charge. Juries are called only in cases of murder
or treason. Normal legal protections are extended to defendants. They
include public trials, the right of the accused to be present, and the
accused's right to confront witnesses, to appeal, to qualify for bail in
most cases, and to be represented by counsel, on a pro bono
basis if indigent. Judges from other Commonwealth countries--mostly
African or Asian--are employed on a contract basis. Judges remain
independent from influence by the executive in spite of occasional
government pressure.
Under the penal code, a detained person must be brought before a
magistrate within forty-eight hours. Before repeal of the Public
Security Act in 1992, persons could be detained indefinitely on security
charges. The president still has broad personal powers to detain persons
regarded as security threats. Since 1989 only a few brief detentions
have been reported, all under the Public Security Act.
Much progress in human rights has occurred since political freedoms
were restored in 1992. Both military and police engaged in physical
harassment of members of opposition parties before the 1992 election of
constitutional delegates, but later elections were free of intimidation.
The government's control of jobs, housing, and land enables it to reward
supporters and discourage dissent. Legislation still on the books brings
the risk of prosecution and imprisonment for publishing defamatory
material against the president or for publishing or possessing
publications banned by the government for security reasons. The close
association of the armed forces with the SPPF represents a further
threat to the full exercise of political rights. In an attempt to
mollify domestic and foreign critics, Ren� removed the deputy secretary
general of the SPPF as chief of staff of the defense forces in 1992.
The number of crimes and other offenses reported in 1990 was 4,564,
of which 35 percent involved violations of traffic ordinances. Thefts,
burglaries, housebreaking, and other forms of stealing made up most of
the remaining 1,559 offenses. There were five cases of homicide;
thirteen cases of rape and indecent assault; 634 aggravated or common
assaults; 287 offenses against property such as trespass and arson; and
403 incidents of disorderly conduct. The general trend appears to be
downward, although the sharpest decline is in vehicular offenses. Theft
in tourist hotels is said to be on the rise. Juvenile delinquency--
linked to boredom and isolation--is a growing problem.
Official statistics are not available on sentencing or the prison
population. The United States Department of State described living
conditions at the Police Bay prison as spartan but said that in 1993
both SPPF and opposition members drafting the constitution had been
allowed, to visit and found conditions satisfactory. Weekly family
visits are allowed, and inmates have access to printed materials.
Seychelles
Seychelles - FOREIGN RELATIONS
Seychelles
Officials characterize the nation's foreign policy as one of
"positive nonalignment," under which the country pursues an
active and independent course in the conduct of its international
relations. Seychelles is a member of the United Nations (UN) and a
number of related agencies, including the IMF. It is also a member of
the Commonwealth, which has assisted it in transition to multiparty
democracy; the Organization of African Unity (OAU); and the Nonaligned
Movement. In 1984 Seychelles became linked with Mauritius and Madagascar
in the Indian Ocean Commission (IOC); later joined by Comoros and France
on behalf of Reunion, the IOC seeks to promote economic cooperation in
the region and expand interisland trade.
Although the Ren� government often has sided with the more radical
members and causes of the Nonaligned Movement, neither the positions
taken nor the radical rhetoric in which they were expressed have been
allowed to interfere with essentially pragmatic decisions directly
affecting the nation's interests. Seychelles is particularly active in
promoting the concept of the Indian Ocean as a zone of peace,
campaigning for the removal of all foreign powers and bases in the
region. It is committed to seeking the end of the United States naval
presence on Diego Garcia, an island territory of Britain situated about
1,900 kilometers east of Mah�. In a spirit of solidarity with the more
radical states of the nonaligned spectrum, Seychelles has pursued
political ties with the German Democratic Republic (East Germany),
Libya, Cuba, Iraq, and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North
Korea). It has supported the former Soviet Union on such controversial
issues as its invasion of Afghanistan.
Seychelles also seeks to strengthen its relations with the littoral
nations of the Indian Ocean. Such states include other island
governments such as those of French-administered Reunion, and
independent Maldives and Mauritius as well as more distant nations such
as India, Bangladesh, Tanzania, and Kenya. India has been a source of
funding for Seychelles projects and in October 1990 Ren� paid his third
visit to the country following the first meeting of the Indo-Seychelles
Joint Commission. The body has continued to meet biennially to discuss
common trade, investment, and communications matters. In addition, the
navies of the two countries cooperate. In February 1992, the Seychelles
minister of education visited Bangladesh to expand bilateral cooperation
in education, literacy programs, and rural development. Relations with
the Tanzanian government were especially close during the early years of
the Ren� regime. Tanzanians had helped train and equip the initiators
of the coup that brought Ren� to power, and Tanzanian advisers had
helped establish and train the Seychelles People's Liberation Army. With
both Tanzania and Kenya, Seychelles has discussed sharing labor
resources and with Tanzania, the sharing of its EEZ, tourism promotion,
and air flights.
In a practical sense, Seychelles' links with the countries of the
West have been much more significant than its political kinship with
more radical developing countries. Seychelles has succeeded in
attracting relatively large amounts of aid; foreign assistance per
capita was US$223 annually in 1975-79, US$295 in 1980-85, and US$331 in
1985-90. France has been the leading donor, providing US$53.9 million in
bilateral assistance between 1982 and 1990, in addition to contributions
through the World Bank and the EC. Loans placed through the Seychelles
Development Bank and direct investments are also important. Examples of
projects France has funded for Seychelles included in 1990 assistance to
the television station to promote broadcasting in French and provision
of devices to improve airport security. Britain has been second in total
aid, supplying US$26.1 million in the 1982-90 period. Australia has
extended modest amounts of aid, primarily in the form of education and
training programs, as part of its efforts to become more fully engaged
in the Indian Ocean region. Before the Soviet Union broke up in 1990, it
was a significant contributor, granting such aid as fuel oil to assist
in patrolling the EEZ. The relative prosperity of the islands has
brought a decline in aid from most sources. The British aid level had
fallen to about US$1.5 million annually in 1991.
In addition to Peace Corps volunteers working in Seychelles, United
States assistance, which earlier amounted to US$3.3 million annually,
was US$1.3 million in fiscal year 1993. The preeminent feature of United States-Seychelles
relations over the preceding thirty years was the United States Air
Force satellite tracking station situated on Mah� on land leased from
Seychelles at US$4.5 million annually as of 1993. The Seychelles economy
benefits by a further US$5 to US$6 million annually in local spending
linked to the station. The facility's complement consists of four
uniformed air force personnel, about seventy-five civilian contract
personnel who operate the equipment, and some 175 Seychellois employees.
United States naval vessels periodically pay calls at Victoria.
Restrictions on British and United States ships carrying nuclear weapons
had not been enforced since 1983.
Furthermore, Seychelles has sought to promote economic relations
particularly with countries from which it might receive loan assistance.
For example, it obtained a US$1 million loan for elementary education in
December 1988 from the OPEC Fund for International Development. In
August 1990 Seychelles signed an agreement on economic and technological
cooperation with China.
The Seychelles government condemned apartheid policies in South
Africa and joined in the voting in the OAU for trade sanctions. Although
Ren� declared that his government would take steps to reduce
Seychelles' reliance on South African products, South Africa's
relatively low prices and short delivery times have in fact brought
South Africa a growing share of Seychelles' trade. In 1991 South Africa
accounted for 13.5 percent of total imports. Numerous factors combined
to curtail tourism from South Africa in the early 1980s--the Ren�
government's hostility, the apparent South African involvement in the
1981 coup attempt, a reduction in air links, and the recession in South
Africa. Beginning in 1988, however, tourist arrivals began to increase
dramatically, climbing to 13,570 in 1993.
As negotiations proceeded to convert to a multiracial political
system in Pretoria, Seychelles modified its hostile political stance,
agreeing to enter into commercial and consular relations in April 1992.
South Africa also agreed in August 1992 to pay compensation of US$3
million for the abortive 1981 coup. In November 1993 the two countries
agreed to establish relations at the ambassadorial level.
Seychelles
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