Seychelles: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen

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The Seychelles are a demographically inhomogeneous ex-slaveholder society with less than 100,000 inhabitants characterised by extreme income disparity and the highest imprisonment rate in the  world.  
The Seychelles are a demographically inhomogeneous ex-slaveholder society with less than 100,000 inhabitants characterised by extreme income disparity and the highest imprisonment rate in the  world. The decisive factor for this unusual prison rate is not the presence of Somali pirates in Seychelles prisons, but the unresolved drug policy question. Most prisoners are there on drug related convictions.  


(When the British gained control of the islands during the Napoleonic Wars, they allowed the French upper class to retain their land. Both the French and British settlers used enslaved Africans, and although the British prohibited slavery in 1835, African workers continued to come. Thus the Gran blan ("big whites") of French origin dominated economic and political life. The British administration employed Indians on indentured servitude to the same degree as in Mauritius resulting in a small Indian population. The Indians, like a similar minority of Chinese, were confined to a merchant class.)
(When the British gained control of the islands during the Napoleonic Wars, they allowed the French upper class to retain their land. Both the French and British settlers used enslaved Africans, and although the British prohibited slavery in 1835, African workers continued to come. Thus the Gran blan ("big whites") of French origin dominated economic and political life. The British administration employed Indians on indentured servitude to the same degree as in Mauritius resulting in a small Indian population. The Indians, like a similar minority of Chinese, were confined to a merchant class.)
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