The realization by a core of the ZAPU leadership that the old political methods had failed and that a new leadership had to be found to confront the enemy by force of arms led to the formation of the Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU). From its inception, ZANU aimed at armed struggle as the main thrust of national effort. Within a few months of its formation it began recruiting cadres for training in China and Ghana.

It must, however, be stated on behalf of the National Democratic Party that it was the first nationalist organization to distinguish clearly between the remedial approach to grievances and a basic approach that attacked the main cause of grievances against an unjust system. The NDP agitated for political change leading to majority rule based on one man, one vote. ZANU, however, went further by emphasizing that one man, one vote could only be gained by an armed revolutionary struggle.

The unilateral declaration of independence in 1965 rendered the traditional political methods of struggle (strikes, demonstrations, noncollaboration, and appeals to Britain) impotent. In fact, both ZANU and the People’s Caretaker Council had been banned in August 1964, leaving them no option but to operate as underground movements.

In those circumstances, external bases became necessary, and these were established in Zambia and Tanzania. As Mozambique became independent, another base area presented itself. In April 1966 ZANU engaged the enemy in what has become known as the Battle of Sinoia. That battle inspired many other encounters with the enemy during 1966–68. ZANU reckons that the second War of Liberation (Chimurenga II) began in April 1966.

It became evident that the strategy of conventional battles was costly in terms of losses—human and material—because the enemy was stronger in manpower and equipment. A revision of strategy and tactics was called for, and a period of tutelage of ZANU cadres occurred in the Tete area of Mozambique between 1970 and 1972. ZANU then relaunched the struggle in December 1972, in the northeastern part of Zimbabwe, after having cultivated popular support over a period of nearly two years. Thenceforth, the struggle was sustained until the cease-fire arranged under the Lancaster House Agreement, save for a brief period in 1974–75 under a détente arrangement.

In the wake of the détente exercise, sharp contradictions developed in ZANLA, the armed wing of ZANU, as some commanders turned renegade after being infiltrated by the enemy. The enemy strategy was clearly to destroy the forces that now covered most of the northeastern zone. Thomas Nhari and Dakarai Badza, who became leaders of the rebellion, kidnapped some members of DARE (the Revolutionary Council) headed by Herbert Chitepo, and at the rear camp base of Chifombo, on the Zambian side near Tete, they assassinated scores of cadres, male and female, for refusing to join them. Nevertheless, the rebellion was crushed.

The enemy was not deterred by this failure. Within four months of the release of the detained nationalist leaders as a result of the détente, Herbert Chitepo was killed on March 18, 1975, when a bomb blew up his car. For most of 1975 the armed struggle made no progress and indeed suffered serious reversals, especially since the newly formed ANC umbrella organization, led by Bishop Abel Muzorewa, had neither direction nor set purpose other than that of stopping the war and negotiating with the Smith regime. The ZANU wing of the new composite body felt offended by the tactics employed against them by the front-line states (Tanzania, Zambia, Mozambique, Botswana, and Angola), which had coerced them into joining the ANC.

Following the shocking death of Herbert Chitepo, the ZANU Central Committee met in March 1975 to review the party’s strategy. It was decided at that meeting that the writer, then secretary-general of the party, should leave the country immediately for Mozambique and Tanzania where he would undertake the reorganization of the party’s external wing and its fighting wing, ZANLA. The writer requested that a companion, Edgar Tekere, then secretary for youth in ZANU, accompany him. On April 4, 1975, we left for the eastern border where, at Nyafaro, we were joined by Chief Tangwena who led us into Mozambique.

The Conflict Intensifies

The failure of the Victoria Falls talks held between the Smith delegation and that of the ANC led by Bishop Muzorewa convinced the front-line states that Smith was still not amenable to political change. There was no alternative but the continuation of the liberation war, which was rekindled in January 1976 using Mozambique as a rear base. After some dissension the ZANLA commanders finally began to work in unison, expanding their military zones stage by stage and transforming many of them into liberated and semiliberated zones. By 1978 the armed struggle had had such remarkable progress that the collapse of the Smith regime was just a matter of time. But between the Victoria Falls conference in 1975 and the final constitutional conference at Lancaster House in 1979, two other constitutional conferences occurred: the 1976 Geneva Conference based on the Kissinger proposals and the meetings based on the Anglo-American proposals, held first in Malta in January 1978 and then in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, in March 1978.

As the idea of a conference to discuss the plan proposed by U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger—which aimed at stopping the war on the basis of ultimate majority rule—took shape, all the leaders of the nationalist groups were invited to a meeting with the front-line states. At this meeting ZANU stood as ZANU for the first time. The meeting had been called to provide a forum for reaching some modicum of unity on nationalist strategy for the prosecution of the struggle. As this could not be done with the ANC, now completely divorced from the war, Pres. Julius Nyerere of Tanzania took various nationalist leaders aside and advised them to form a political front so the political leadership could agree on a common political strategy for the proposed Geneva Conference. It was this idea that led to the formation of the Patriotic Front, which was to adopt a common position for all future constitutional conferences. The Geneva Conference, however, was a fiasco. Smith would not accept the British proposals and the Patriotic Front rejected the Kissinger plan completely.

ZANU strategy following the failure of the Geneva Conference was twofold. First, the ZANU leadership had to be restructured. Second, the liberation war had to be intensified, and more arms had to be procured from allies and friends. The political restructuring of ZANU affected mainly the composition of its Central Committee. At a meeting held at a ZANLA military rear base outside Chimoio which lasted for nearly two weeks, it was decided that the new Central Committee would consist of elected members chosen from various constituencies. It was at this meeting that the writer was elected president of the party; Simon Muzenda, vice-president; Edgar Tekere, secretary-general; Josiah Tongogara, secretary of defense; Meya Urimbo, national political commissar; Teurai Ropa, secretary of women’s affairs; and several others to various positions. For the first time, several members of the ZANLA high command were now also members of the Central Committee so that they too could participate in the policymaking function of the party. The successful restructuring of the party marked a final phase in the protracted effort to save ZANU and establish it as the national vanguard movement.

At the end of 1977, Britain and the United States published their so-called Anglo-American proposals. The result was the Malta meeting between the Patriotic Front and an Anglo-American team at which the Patriotic Front emphasized the need for accepting certain fundamental democratic principles, such as universal adult suffrage, free elections, restructuring of public service, and the disbanding of the Smith regime’s illegal army. Negotiations on these principles failed.

Victory in Sight

In the absence of a political solution, armed struggle remained the only option open to ZANU. Formation of the Patriotic Front had resulted in the recruitment of many cadres for the military struggle, but these activities became confined to the northwest and western areas of Zimbabwe and never reached the magnitude of the more comprehensive and more effective ZANLA operations. They complemented the ZANLA operations, however, and by the end of 1979 martial law had been extended to 95% of the country. Between December 1972 and December 1979 (when a cease-fire was agreed to at Lancaster House) the death toll amounted to about 20,000 people.

The “internal settlement” of 1978 that gave rise to the Muzorewa regime in what was called Zimbabwe-Rhodesia only worsened the situation and invited more daring raids from the guerrilla forces. ZANU, having concentrated on party restructuring in 1977, termed 1978 the Year of the People, when the party and the people would be united so that ZANU and the people would be one. The following year, 1979, was designated Year of the People’s Storm (Gore regukurahundi), when the struggle would escalate and enemy bases and administrative centres would be stormed and destroyed. The collapse of the Muzorewa-Smith regime was inevitable.

On Aug. 1, 1979, a few days before the Commonwealth heads of government meeting opened in Lusaka, Zambia, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher told the British Parliament that her government was “wholly committed to genuine majority rule in Rhodesia.” The Commonwealth meeting produced an agreement on Rhodesia that recognized the principle of new elections based on one man, one vote under British authority. Britain undertook to convene a constitutional conference to be attended by both the black and white leadership. A cease-fire also had to be established to create an atmosphere of peace for the elections.

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The Lancaster House Negotiations

The Lancaster House conference was attended by the Patriotic Front (ZANU and ZAPU) delegation, jointly led by the writer and Joshua Nkomo, and by the Zimbabwe-Rhodesia delegation, with Bishop Muzorewa, Silas Mundawarara, Ian Smith, and Ndabaningi Sithole as the principal members. The British delegation was led by Lord Carrington, who chaired the conference. Lord Carrington’s diplomacy was characterized by a bias in favour of the Muzorewa group. Muzorewa’s strategy became one of refraining from opposing any of the British constitutional proposals, and the Patriotic Front poked fun at his delegation and referred to its members as “the yes men.” On the other hand, the Patriotic Front put up a firm and principled stand and won some useful concessions, although they too conceded ground. They refused to be driven into walking out of the conference, as desired by the Muzorewa group and some members of the British team.

The proposals that caused serious debate were:

  1. The composition of the House of Assembly and Senate which granted disproportionate racial representation to the white community. In the House of Assembly they have 20 out of 100 seats, and in the Senate 10 out of 40 seats.
  2. The need to pay prompt and adequate compensation for the deprivation of property especially as this affected the right to acquire land for the resettlement of the peasants. The issue here was that Britain had to raise large funds for this purpose.
  3. A constitutional amendment procedure requiring 100% concurrence of the total membership of the House of Assembly on certain issues.
  4. The cease-fire arrangements and positioning of the warring forces during the cease-fire.
  5. The status of the guerrilla forces which Lord Carrington finally accepted as “lawful forces,” while at the same time refusing to accord them an equal status with the white Rhodesian ones.

The Zimbabwe constitution agreed at the Lancaster House conference and granted by Britain represents a hard-earned political victory achieved principally through a sustained and bitter armed struggle. It was far from perfect, but it contained more positive than negative aspects and, insofar as it granted independence within a democratic political order, it constituted a viable base on which political power could be built. It was basically this inherent potential that made it acceptable to the Patriotic Front.

The constitution is the supreme law of the country. There is also a formidable Declaration of Rights enshrining the fundamental rights and freedoms of the individual and protecting the rights to life, personal liberty, and freedom from slavery, forced labour, and inhuman treatment. It grants protection against the arbitrary deprivation of property and arbitrary searches of persons or their property. It secures the protection of the law, the protection of the freedoms of conscience, of expression, of assembly, and of association. It also protects freedom of movement and forbids discrimination on the grounds of race, tribe, place of origin, political opinion, colour, or creed.

The constitution creates the usual organs of government—Parliament, which consists of the Senate and a House of Assembly; the Executive, whose authority is vested in the president acting on the advice of the Cabinet; and the Judiciary. Elections to the House of Assembly are every five years and on the basis of adult suffrage (18 years and upward).

A New Nation is Born

The first elections were held in early March 1980, and of the 80 common roll seats, ZANU (PF) won 57, PF (ZAPU) won 20, and the UANC 3. All the 20 white seats were won by the Rhodesia Front (now the Republican Front). The Senate, 14 of whose seats are filled by an electoral college of the common roll seat holders in the House of Assembly, is dominated by representatives of ZANU (PF).

The resounding ZANU (PF) electoral victory was undoubtedly an expression of the unity and solidarity built over many years between the party and the people through the instrumentality of the armed struggle.

The Rhodesia public, for years fed on propaganda that Robert Mugabe was a rabid racist full of animosity and vindictiveness, was shocked to hear the new prime minister call, in his first post-election address to the nation, for national reconciliation so that those who had been enemies might recognize their inevitable oneness as dedicated Zimbabweans with a common destiny. The prime minister proceeded to demonstrate the meaning of national unity and reconciliation by including in his Cabinet four (now five) ZAPU members and two whites (one later resigned for reasons of health). ZAPU also has three deputy ministers.

Another dimension of the prime minister’s policy of reconciliation was a request to Lord Soames, who administered the country during the three-month transitional period, to join hands with him in running the country until independence. Under a gentlemen’s agreement, Lord Soames remained governor until April 18, 1980, when the Union Jack gave way to the Zimbabwe flag.

Confidence having been established, the most urgent tasks of the new government became the creation of greater peace, the unity of the people, the resettlement of refugees, the rehabilitation of communities affected by the war, and the rebuilding of the economy. Homes were quickly found for the refugees returning from Mozambique, Zambia, and Botswana, numbering a quarter million, and the internally displaced persons, numbering nearly two million, and they were given plots for cultivation. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, other international agencies, and friendly countries assisted generously with resettlement aid. The program went so smoothly that, despite the existing land hunger among the peasants, a bumper maize (corn) harvest has been realized.

The manufacturing, commercial, and mining sectors also performed well during the first year of independence, and a growth rate of 14% was achieved, most of it due to the manufacturing sector. The need for new machinery and spare parts, however, stands in the way of greater expansion.

Zimbabwe’s mineral resources include gold, chrome, asbestos, nickel, iron ore, coal, copper, tin, and emeralds. Its major agricultural products are tobacco, maize, cotton, wheat, sugar, groundnuts (peanuts), soybeans, beef, and dairy products. The country’s infrastructure—its railway and road systems, hydroelectric and water systems—is very sound, despite a current railway locomotive shortage and a need for better roads in the rural areas.