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Brussels,
Avenue Franklin D. Roosevelt: a long stretch on the
periphery of the European capital, forming a section of
the connection between one of the most stylish shopping
districts in Brussels and the noble suburbs to the south
of the city. Here, away from the city center, and also
away from the European quarter and its immigrés
de luxe, is a row of embassies and ambassadorial
residencies, classical sites of international diplomacy
and representation. One of these villas, lined up side
by side, housed the Somali embassy until 1991. Today,
due to Somalia’s civil war and the lack of an
internationally recognized government, the embassy has
lost its function. Whatever might be happening in
"Somalia" and whatever the affairs of
"Somalis" might be anywhere in the world, for
the time being, this can no longer be represented within
the framework of an international representational model
based on the idea and practice of national delegates.
The fading photographs of Somali politicians
hanging on the walls in the interior of the abandoned
embassy, the maps, on which the lost integrity of a
territory is recorded, are the mute witnesses to this
impossibility.
It
is no coincidence that an embassy building abandoned
under precisely these circumstances was able to become
one of the central sites of the political and social
struggle of the Sans-Papiers residing in Belgium: the
Universal Embassy. The reason for this is not so much
that the occupation of the building by a group of Sans-Papiers
in January of 2001 was primarily, and in a general sense,
meant as an offensive appropriation and recoding of
certain "symbols of power." Initially decisive
was the plain fact that an abandoned embassy, due to
its-in a double sense (with reference to Belgium as
well as Somalia)-extraterritorial legal status, presented
an appropriate site of refuge.
In this context, the gesture of occupation was granted
a precise meaning: it referred to the actual appropriation
of a certain legal protective zone, which was a result
of the system of diplomatic representation that continued
to function in certain ways even after the de facto
collapse of the system; it claimed the piece of ground
on which they stood, which remained on the precarious
border between representation and its impossibility.
The possible outcome of this is, in fact, as Tristan
Wibault wrote in a text about the Universal Embassy,
first and foremost a "micropolitical habitat":
the persistently precarious possibility of residing
this side of every kind of territory.
How
precarious this possibility is, is just as legible in
the immediate prehistory of the Universal Embassy as
in its first central area of activity: since 1998, a
group of Sans-Papiers had occupied the centrally located
Béguinage church in Brussels. When the occupation came
to an abrupt end in 2000 after an unexplained fire in
the church, the Belgian authorities offered to house
the Sans-Papiers by scattering them throughout various
Belgian cities. However, the strengthened network of
Sans-Papiers and supporters, which had formed in the
steady confrontations with authorities, had soon detected
a new site in the unoccupied Somali embassy building.
Apart from the necessary renovations, the initial work
carried out there, against the backdrop of the regularization
campaign called for in 1999 by the liberal-socialist-green
party coalition government in Belgium, concentrated
to a great extent on the mutual exchange of experiences
as well as the provision of legal support in regularization
procedures. The actual founding of the Universal Embassy
first followed one year after the occupation, with the
proclamation of the Déclaration de l’Ambassade Universelle
in the lead-up to the EU summit in Laeken, Brussels,
in December 2001.
The
process of the extraordinary regularization of Sans-Papiers,
which was set in motion in Belgium very much in the
wake of strong public protests following from the death
of 20-year-old Semira Adamu in 1998-a result of deportation
measures-very clearly shows the shortcomings characteristic
of even those migration policies posing as "liberal":
approximately 30,000 regularization applications stood
in contrast to a wealth of unprocessed and rejected
applications and those not even made because of the
pre-set criteria. Those who still had no residency status
after the finish of the campaign could await only, as
stated in the Universal Embassy Declaration,
"repression and expulsion." The flipside of
the processed regularizations came in the form of intensified
deportations and the six centres
fermés (closed camps) erected during the 1990s,
which still remain highly active. The key point, however,
is that every regularization campaign leads in the most
extreme case, as it says in the Declaration
to a "temporary cleansing of the prominent clandestineness."
It does not at all change the basic facts of the matter
of the permanent social, economic, and political production
of clandestine existence with which we are currently
confronted.
The
Universal Embassy’s analysis is unambiguous on this
point. The new social figure of the Sans-Papiers emerges
mainly at the scattered intersections of the economic
regime of neo-liberal globalization and the juridical-political
regime of the nation state, there, where the new rejections
and inclusions of the one, cross the inclusion-exclusion
mechanisms of the other. Whereas current movements of
migration are highly motivated by the effects of the
globalization-induced destruction of traditional economies
as well as the austerity policies imposed by international
institutions in the countries of origin, in the classic
industrial states we are experiencing huge numbers of
migrants being pushed into precarious legal situations
and socially declassed as well as the emergence of new
forms of exploitation, particularly in out-sourcing,
the agricultural sector, as well as in the low-wage
area of the service sector. As stated in the Declaration,
"The clandestine, as an inverted figure, is a de-localized
worker from the third world in our neighborhoods."
The official policy seems to know only two reactions
to the growing chasm between aggravated economic existential
conditions and various degrees of deprivation of social
rights tied to citizenship-police repression and models
of selective opening of borders and international temporary
work that serve economic interests: "Work is imposing
inclusion norms outside the law."
This
deals with a norm of precariousness, which extends from
the working situation into unemployment, from the withholding
of social rights into the deprivation of the sheer right
of residency and finds its most extreme intensification
in the existence of Sans-Papiers. The Sans-Papiers existence
is characterized by a multiplicity of survival techniques,
which develop within the framework of a splintering
of distressed living situations. Therefore, it is not
only the exclusion from enjoying political rights that
forms an obstacle to the political articulation of the
social evidence present in the Sans-Papiers existence,
but primarily, the social atomization which underlies
this existence.
It
is precisely here that we can see why the activities
of the Universal Embassy are neither limited to individual
support activities (based on the model of social work),
nor to the carrying through of direct protest actions,
or the formulation of programmatic demands (based on
the models of activism or representation of political
interests). The pivot of the various activities is the
attempt to counteract the initial situation of social
atomization by creating a context of experience and
articulation, a context which is often lacking due to
the isolating effects of declassing. In this context,
it is possible to understand the crucial significance
given to exchange, the production of texts (or even
theatrical forms) as well as the so-called témoignages-practices
of "testifying" that mediate the concrete
experiences of Sans-Papiers with structurally oriented
analyses. The context of articulation that we are speaking
of, incidentally, is by no means limited to the Embassy’s
immediate surroundings, but also supports mobilization
and intervention capacities in conflict situations taking
place elsewhere, for example, on the occasion of several
hunger strikes in occupied churches and university buildings
in Brussels (an action taken in 2003 by groups of Afghan
and Iranian refugees in protest of the receipt of deportation
notices).
Ultimately,
what opposes the social production of clandestine existence
is the social production of a context of life through
which the social evidence of the Sans-Papiers existence
can be translated into political articulation. That
also explains the Universal Embassy’s clear rejection
of the abstract idea of "world citizen rights":
"A hypothetical world citizen status is a useless
abstraction. Planetary belonging is not a status, it
is a factual reality." The demand, as articulated
by the Universal Embassy, is, instead, to quote Tristan
Wibault once more, in the "call for a new relationship
of the legal subject to the productive subject,"
which means to an emerging social subject, as it appears
in the current processes of social recomposition. The
fact that this subject cannot be represented in the
framework of the nation-state’s legal order, does not
mean that it could be represented in a "world legal
order," of which we have hardly any idea other
than a higher, but for that reason diluted and less
obligatory version of national legal systems.
On
the other hand, the "universality" of the
Universal Embassy is not on the order of being and representation,
but rather, of becoming; it is not oriented on the abstract
idea of an all-encompassing global area, but rather,
on a local "inhabited space": an inhabited
space that is constantly reconstituted through social
practices and whose evidences form the basis on which
law has to be examined, if it wants to avoid turning
into injustice. This concept of the local, which is
central in the Declaration, includes the possibility of residing just as much as
the possibility of moving - in Europe as well as in
all locations, in which the perspective for a local
existence are being destroyed on a daily basis. The
precarious residency, which the Universal Embassy enables,
is temporarily established somewhere between a site
of refuge and that double possibility, whose liberation
from the dictates of territory has yet to be realized.
Translated
by Lisa Rosenblatt
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