The National - News

Borders guarantee neither safety nor security

- Shelina Zahra Janmohamed is the author of Generation M: Young Muslims Changing the World SHELINA JANMOHAMED

It’s been revealed that Bangladesh is forging a deal with Myanmar to purchase rice. Bangladesh is facing a huge shortage of its national staple food and has been seeking to secure imports from nearby countries before a nationwide shortage starts to create dangerous unrest. This is especially in considerat­ion of elections that are due to take place next year and that the government is understand­ably keen to win. Nothing surprising in that.

Except this deal has been sealed against a backdrop of a genocide taking place in Myanmar and, when the people being persecuted, raped and slaughtere­d are fleeing to Bangladesh, they are being turned back. Rice is welcome, but not people.

The border restricts human beings, but is invisible to business and money.

During the UK’s Brexit campaign, the pro-leave party, Ukip, infamously launched a poster with a picture of Syrian refugees fleeing their war-torn homes. “Breaking point”, it screamed at a terrified population, keen to secure an invisible border that exists on maps – albeit one that has only existed for a few decades. Oil, weapons and money can cross freely, but not people. It’s the story of Brexit itself. We just don’t want people. Britain is battening down the hatches. No bridges, only borders.

Mr Trump mobilised his base by promising a wall. No more people, at least not those other kinds of people. If you’re flying into the United States and you’re the wrong kind of person, you’ll simply be banned at the border.

The border doesn’t care if you’ll lose your life, live in poverty or suffer brutal oppression. On the wrong side of the border? Sorry, we’ll take your products and wealth, but don’t cross the border.

The increasing symbolism of physical barricades comes hand in hand with a world in which online connectivi­ty is more fluid than ever. Here, there appear to be no borders. This is where financial capital, bitcoin, news and ideas face barely a flicker of restrictio­n. Yet when it comes to people, we’re not keen on people moving, especially not poor ones.

Yet wealth today is impervious to these borders. The nation state is a comparativ­ely novel idea when we consider it in the vast backdrop of human history. While papers for travel, safe conduct and introducti­ons have been around for several hundred – if not a thousand – years, the passport as we know it today came into being in the First World War era and was instigated in Europe. That’s no surprise given that that is when so many of the nation states we know today started being sketched out and their limits enforced. Edges and limits were more fluid up until that point.

The nation state has brought about a degree of security and the ability to institute rules, manage trade and even – dare I say it – maintain peace. Or at least the semblance of it. The way borders were drawn has, itself, been hugely problemati­c. Just look at how many wars around the world are taking place along artificial­ly drawn borders.

But it increasing­ly appears that borders themselves, and the idea of borders, are causing problems. Instead of offering security, belonging and a neutral line, we are entrenchin­g borders and using them as a proxy for jingoism and hatred.

To try and divide “us” and “them” is even more complex because nations are now typically more mixed and diverse and globalisat­ion is more natural, especially for younger generation­s.

Borders and their physical manifestat­ion are becoming the mascots of nationalis­ts who insist on their entrenchme­nt. They are being specifical­ly used to create separation and division.

The idea of borders is, itself,

The idea of borders is about division and is being misused as a proxy for jingoism and hatred

about division, and is being misused. Is there a way to reclaim the idea of borders as anything that can be good?

In 2016, Jean-Claude Juncker, EU commission president, showed solidarity with refugees by declaring that “borders are the worst invention ever made by politician­s”. It reminds me of the quote: “democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.” Borders may or may not be the worst invention, but we have them. The question is how do we make the best out of them so that people find safety and security through them.

 ?? Reuters ?? A Rohingya refugee carries bamboo for making a temporary shelter at a camp in Bangladesh
Reuters A Rohingya refugee carries bamboo for making a temporary shelter at a camp in Bangladesh
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