The following article is adapted from Lia Incognita's speech for the Movement Beyond
Borders public forum held on Wurundjeri land at the Victorian Trades Hall on Saturday 30
November 2013. The forum was organised by the Beyond Borders Collective, with speakers
Kaneez Raza, Angela Mitropoulos, Dawood, Ruben Blake and Lia Incognita sharing their
perspectives, followed by questions and discussion with the audience. You can watch the
video of the forum online (1hour 54 minutes) ---- Asked to contemplate what a cross-border
politics in Australia could look like today, I want to stress that for me, a movement
beyond borders is not a movement of no nations or against nationhood. In fact one of the
earliest interactions I had with the Beyond Borders Collective when it first formed was to
question a photo on the Beyond Borders page at the time which showed a banner stating 'no
borders, no nations'.
I believe supporting Indigenous sovereignty is essential to cross-border politics, and
indeed no contradiction, if a cross-border politics understands that all people have the
right to determine their law and the future of their land, though no nation has the right
to refuse entry to vulnerable peoples. This is no contradiction unless the only way you
can conceive of a country is as private property - which unfortunately seems to be not
only a popular metaphor but the dominant interpretation driving government policy. As
Lorenzo Veracini said recently in Arena magazine (No. 125, Aug/Sep 2013)
"global condemnation of Australia's stance in 2001 was met with 'No one can tell me what
to do', 'Nobody understands us', and 'I didn't do it' responses (that is, they threw the
children overboard). Furthermore, Australia had a Prime Minister who was extraordinarily
in touch with public sentiment was speaking about entry to the country as if he was
sixteen and talking about his room: 'We will determine who comes to this country and under
what circumstances'."
We should not accept this metaphor, this myth that a nation is dependent on border
policing, and that a country is analogous to private property.
Another question this panel was asked was how can we break from the language that defines
the discussion around borders now? This is imperative because a lot of pro-refugee
rhetoric doesn't challenge the problematic ways the discussion has been framed by the
right. We need to resist phrases like 'genuine refugees' or 'economic migrants' or 'the
lucky country' when it has only ever been lucky for some. We need to resist language that
feeds the lie of terra nullius by suggesting Australia is 'young', 'free' and full of
empty space. We need to refuse to make these constant ongoing reassurances that only a
small, manageable number of refugees will arrive, that they will be harmless and grateful
and assimilate, that they will contribute labour and consumable diversity but nothing
disconcerting or transformative. We need to reject this rhetoric not only because it
legitimates a claims process that is traumatising, invasive and victimising, but also
because it legitimates the Australian government's right to decide.
The perceived threat of people crossing borders is only part of what motivates Australian
policy, so assuaging this anxiety is only part of challenging border violence. Operation
Sovereign Borders is very explicitly and obviously about the colonial state performing
sovereignty, as are earlier iterations of border control. This tactic has been part of
Australian history since the start of colonial occupation. The Colony of Victoria passed
the Chinese Act limiting the number of Chinese immigrants on 11 June 1855, before even the
first Constitution Bill passed the Victorian House of Commons. And, of course, the
Immigration Restriction Act was quite famously the first major piece of legislation passed
after Federation in 1901. As well as forced eviction from their lands, there have been
numerous controls on Aboriginal people's movement in their own countries through
Australia's history. This includes the exemption certificate system by which one could
leave a reserve and access rights otherwise denied to Aboriginal people at the time, such
as the right to own land or open a bank account, but in exchange was required to seek
state permission before visiting family on reserves.
Border violence is central to colonial governments in Australia establishing and
legitimating themselves, not least by promoting the notion of Australia as a single
country and presenting the border as a natural geographic feature, formed by oceans and
waters as Suvendrini Perera discusses. And, in fact, Australia's colonial past is brought
up quite often in relation to border violence, for example in images of the First Fleet as
'boat people'. This imagery is important because the fear of invasion as retribution is a
powerful motif in white Australian imagination, a motif that Meaghan Morris calls 'the
chain of displacement'. Border violence is part of projecting the invader as outside and
other, and functions as a concealment of European invasion.
But bringing up the colonial past can also normalise or nativise settler colonisation, and
erase Indigenous subjectivity and sovereignty in slogans like 'we are all boat people'. A
focus on the moment of invasion or on the colonial past positions colonisation as history.
It makes colonialisation a done deal, to which the only sensible responses are regret and
apology, or pride and forgetfulness - but Australia has a colonial present. The border is
not a natural or inevitable thing and neither is colonisation.
Understanding colonisation as an ongoing and always incomplete process suggests a future
that's open to change. It shifts the onus of explanation to those who want to create and
maintain borders rather than those who want to question them. It challenges the myth that
refugees are a breach in an otherwise secure border. And it reaches through to a space
where white Australia is and can only ever be a fiction that is made material through
violence.
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zondag 3 augustus 2014
(en) Australia, Anarchist Affinity - The Platform #2 - Border Violence as Settler Nativism, Posted on 26 July 2014 by Guest Author
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