negative – moral weight to the act of migration. A country for everyone, and everyone in their country.
But it should by now be clear to all that this supposed equivalence of countries was illusory. Many of the nation-states hurriedly set up in Africa, Asia and the Middle East after World War II turned into fundamentally different entities from the old, rich, democratic and globalised nation-states of Europe.
Where there was no previous political culture of a sort that could avert it, the various monopolies granted to the modern state – over violence, tax collection, etc – produced a collection of clan fiefdoms riven by ethnic conflict and only held together by the authoritarianism of internationally sponsored strongmen.
The resulting devastation of vast swaths of the world’s social and economic capital has evacuated the nation-state system of nearly all its erstwhile promise, and turned it, for a great part of the world’s population, into nothing more than a universal repressive grid. It is no accident, therefore, that the revolutionary movements that have emerged in the Middle East and Africa in the wake of the strongmen, locate their idealism, less in the nation-state, than in religion, ethnicity and empire. These movements have, in their turn, pushed the disaster of several nation-states to its final stage – and other nation-states will blow up too, before this phase is complete.
The disaster has only been intensified by the readiness of western armies to bomb the civilians of those same places – in contravention of the resolutions passed in Europe at the birth of the aeronautic era. This has made it abundantly clear that the internationalist platitudes of the nation-state era are exactly that: An Iraqi citizen clearly has a very different status from her western counterpart. The only lasting way to secure the legal protections which, according to UN slogans, accrue to all humans, is to go west – and lay one’s hands on a western passport.
Against this background, the intensification of border controls, and the suppression of that fundamental human instinct – to move – completes the picture of what we can call our contemporary apartheid – in which affluent, peaceful, democratic nations exclude the rest of the world from their own advantage.
This article has been excerpted from: ‘The grid of repression’.
Courtesy: Aljazeera.com