Democracy in Africa
One of the small political parties in Zimbabwe (we have 28 right now and more coming) said this past week that "you cannot remove a dictatorship by democratic means, only by revolution." When he used the word "revolution" I assume he was actually referring to the use of violence in some form to unseat an entrenched autocracy.
Those African States that were governed by a settler class (South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and Angola) all had to fight to gain their rights. In Syria right now the majority are attempting to remove a minority ethnic dictatorship by the use of arms. Libya went through a similar process.
Only in those countries where an external force (the colonial State) exercised its power to determine the nature of the transition did some sort of independent democratic State emerge. In some cases (Egypt) the regime collapsed and change became possible simply by street action - another form of violence. The situation in Turkey is another example of this sort of effort.
What makes the situation in Zimbabwe so distinctive is that the effort to remove the Mugabe dictatorship has concentrated almost exclusively on the use of democratic means. There were good reasons for that choice: it is difficult to imagine that any of our neighbours would have given the forces of change here secure external bases and support. The fact that the cold war no longer sets one group of States against another in such regional or country based conflict is yet another reason. Sourcing arms would be another difficulty although they are abundant enough to fuel conflict anywhere in the world.
But beyond those arguments, it was a choice that the leadership of the MDC made at its inception and in which it was supported by its membership - largely drawn from the working class and rural peasants.