The Colonialism of Human Rights. Colin Samson

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me valuable feedback. Nawel Hamidi, a Ph.D. student at the University of Essex, read Chapter 4, providing expert guidance on the continuous histories of colonialism in Algeria. Stephen Small of the University of California at Berkeley thoroughly read, commented on and gave me new ideas on Chapter 3. Conversations with Lydia Morris, my colleague at Essex, helped a lot with understanding and applying the concept of civic stratification. Exchanges with many others were equally valuable: Andrew Fagan, Director of Human Rights at Essex, on the political positions in the human rights community; Rob Schehr of Northern Arizona University on social justice in the USA; my colleague Carlos Gigoux on US intervention in Latin American politics; my former Ph.D. student Liz Cassell, on colonial law; my colleagues Jason Sumich and Afia Afenah on the democracy – economic growth links in Africa; Pierrot Ross-Tremblay of the University of Ottawa on the concept of cultural obliteration; and my partner, Nicola Gray, on the contemporary arts and colonialism.

      For almost twenty years, I have taught a module called ‘Colonialism, Cultural Diversity and Human Rights’. The students taking it have motivated and encouraged me, and all have contributed something to this book. I would like specially to thank Passent Moussa and Malika Irshad for showing me how pervasive colonial laws are in formerly colonized territories. The University of Essex Sociology department gave me time, space and support to complete the book. Lastly, librarian Sandy Macmillan ordered every single book I needed, and even came up with many that I hadn’t thought of.

      As a white person, I have been privileged. This is so although I had no privileged upbringing in any conventional sense of the word. Born of an unknown US enlisted serviceman and the teenage daughter of an elderly farm-labouring couple, mine was not a childhood for which there were many templates. I remember the Americans who came up our lonely stretch of road lined with Scotch pines on the edge of the Norfolk Fens to see my mother. They drove their Chevvies and Fords to a cottage without electricity or plumbing, and then later when the landowner got my grandparents on the housing list, they came to see my mother in our council house in a nearby village. Many visitors were brown and black, friends to my mother’s various white boyfriends. To a child grappling to understand the world, they were friendly and fun and I soon got used to the fact that Americans all looked different.

      One day, a great-uncle known for his sporting and ribald humour was in conversation with a black airman in our living room. What he said to the airman stopped the talking just for a second. There was a pause after the short, nasal-voiced elderly man exclaimed: ‘Of course, a 100 year ago, you buggers were all slaves.’ It must have been hurtful to the airman, even though he had probably heard similar in his life. As a child of about 7, I didn’t know what he meant. It was probably a digression in a story, which was the main form of communication among older East Anglians. Over the years, my grandmother would remember it to me as she relayed episodes of her life with each visit I made back to the village. I laughed with her, but didn’t know whether it was the great-uncle or the airman or the sentiments that we were laughing at.

      Conversations with the jocular great-uncle and the snappily dressed landowner were just two of the incidents I remember that made me question who I am and with whom I stand aligned in the unequal world I was born into. The sense of moral integrity of white people who must in some way reckon with slavery and colonialism puzzled me. Thinking about it now, it seemed that my great-uncle was saying that slavery was nothing to be ashamed of. In fact, it was the black airman who should feel shame. Similarly, colonial rule, whether under Ian Smith’s Rhodesian apartheid government or otherwise, was not just benign but it improved the lot of Africans. Their subsequent descents en masse into poverty, war and corruption were an inevitable consequence of their own failings. Africans should be grateful to the British, and perhaps even petition for the return of an Empire that once controlled about a quarter of the globe. The credit for unselfish progress is borne by the nation itself, and the insults to others, the presumed beneficiaries, is merely the reverse side of the same coin. White privilege is – or at least it has been until recently – the ability to be cocooned in a virtue so unquestioned that others can be condescendingly dismissed, denounced and despised without repercussion.

      While the UN is outwardly unambiguous about universal human rights, it has of course committed human rights offences, among them the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia causing 500 ‘second-class’ civilian deaths.3 By contrast, states that are charged with enforcing human rights are more equivocal, proclaiming rights that their actions often deny. American Defense Secretary General James Mattis spoke of ‘the unwavering respect for human rights’ of the USA and larger international community in relation to the state-authorized murder and dismemberment of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul.4 Mattis made these commitments in Bahrain where, a year earlier, the leading human rights advocate in the country had been jailed, the only independent newspaper was closed by the government, death penalties had been meted out after forced confessions, and access to the country had been denied to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and the UN Special Rapporteur for Torture.5 A few months later, the President whom Mattis served reiterated his support for the Saudi regime that ordered the killing of Khashoggi, a US resident and critic of the Saudi autocracy, citing billions of dollars in Saudi investments in US companies as a rationale.6 Since this time, the US Congress has blocked the sending of arms to Saudi Arabia and the Gulf autocracies, but this was easily sidestepped through a Presidential veto in July 2019.

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