Categories: Stories

How Robert Mugabe’s guns turned on him

President Robert Mugabe’s imminent fall at the hands of his own military men is not without its irony.

Before this week, the last time army generals appeared on national TV to make political announcements was in January 2002, when they vowed to defend Mugabe’s rule.

This time, they appeared on ZBC to virtually announce the end of his reign.

For years, Mugabe had given the military free reign, including running his campaigns.

 In 2013, out of ideas on how to reenergise his stuttering re-election campaign, it was to two security men that Mugabe turned for help.

Henry Muchena, a retired air vice-marshal, and Sydney Nyanungo, former director internal of the Central Intelligence Organisation (CIO), arrived at ZANU-PF headquarters in 2013 to find a commissariat that was demoralised and out of sorts.

They set about restoring order, enforcing army-style discipline and turning around the department.

According to scholar Blessing-Miles Tendi, who had exclusive access to the campaign at that time, the security officials took over the party’s commissariat, which was the nerve centre of Mugabe’s reelection bid.

“It took charge of party structures and planning and prepared reports and made recommendations about election preparations to ZANU-PF’s elite body, the politburo,” Tendi writes in a 2013 journal published on the campaign.

This was the military being more civil in preserving Mugabe’s rule.

Just five years earlier, human rights groups say the army had been part of a violent run-off campaign, in which the opposition claims hundreds of its supporters were killed.

Now, as he faces his last days under the siege of the military, Mugabe has time to reflect on the folly of allowing the army free reign over so many civilian matters.

Zimbabwe’s army is not an ordinary army. It is still led by many who served in the war of liberation, including General Constantino Chiwenga himself.

Many of them remain steeped in the teachings of the struggle years.

Continued next page

(679 VIEWS)

This post was last modified on November 16, 2017 9:25 pm

Page: 1 2 3

Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

Recent Posts

Zimbabwe third among the least free countries in SADC

Zimbabwe has been ranked third among the least free countries in Southern Africa but it…

May 24, 2026

Why I had a girlfriend two months after my wife’s death- Take 1

I had always considered it a curse for a wife to die before her husband.…

May 18, 2026

Why I had a girlfriend two months after my wife’s death

This is a true story about the challenges and loneliness I faced when my wife…

May 17, 2026

Coming soon

My first long-form article in booklet form: Why I had a girlfriend two months after…

May 16, 2026

Insider Publisher starts whatsapp channel

The editor and publisher of The Insider, Charles Rukuni, has started a whatsapp channel through…

May 15, 2026

Who propped whom: Masiyiwa vs Nyambirai?

A friend who knows about my legal battle with Zimbabwe’s richest man, Strive Masiyiwa, way…

May 1, 2026