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Mugabe and Tsvangirai, BFF?

Zimbabwean strongman Robert Mugabe and opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai finally reached an agreement to share power today. Time to applaud, right?
Maybe.
On paper, today's agreement represents a huge change. Three decades of ruling alone are over for Mugabe. Tsvangirai will be prime minister, with many governing responsibilities.
Then you add the backdrop, as seen in the above video coverage, and it becomes clear: Perhaps nothing but the paper has changed.
Tsvangirai, playing his role as opposition, spoke about the need for reform. Mugabe, playing the wise old ruler, lamented what he calls foreign intervention from his favorite scapegoats: former colonial power Britain and the United States. They were two men giving radically different speeches -- the first crafted and the second rambling -- as if unaware of one another. Mugabe never acknowledged Tsvangirai as prime minister. Tsvangirai buried his head in his hands as Mugabe spoke. Moderator Thabo Mbeki looked sternly forward as the Zimbabwean leader recounted the negotiating process.
There were big smiles for the signing, followed by palpable tension. Outside, supporters of each of the two men threw rocks at one another. There's a long way to go.













What next?
Things will start looking better for the people of Zimbabwe when the UNDP, the World Bank, the IMF, USAID, DFID and a host of other multi-lateral donors, human rights and aid agencies from countries that Mugabe doesn't like or trust start setting up shop again in Harare. Undoubtedly they will be looked upon as stooges for the opposition but it will remain to be seen if Mugabe can have his cake and eat it too: continue to rant against the interfering west while sticking his bony old finger in the honey-pot of internaional aid. Even the Chinese tired of Mugabe's shenanigans so he really has nowhere else to turn. A cynic might say that for the Mugabeites, Tsvangirai has only one real role in this sham of a government of national unity: to turn on the taps of foreign aid and investment. The people of Zimbabwe deserve a democratically elected government. Let's hope that in their zeal to open up shop in Harare the international community doesn't buy too far into this charade.