Early life He was born Solomon Tapfumaneyi Mutusva Mujuru in
Enkeldoorn,
Southern Rhodesia. He was raised in colonial Rhodesia's
Chikomba region. In 1976, Mujuru was appointed military chief of the
Patriotic Front, a theoretical amalgamation of ZAPU and Mugabe's
Zimbabwe African National Union (ZANU). From 1976 to 1979, he supervised operational planning, infiltration, and the movement of ZANLA cadres inside Rhodesia. In 1980, the ZANLA commander was instrumental in demobilising former guerrillas in assembly points monitored by Commonwealth forces.
Post-Independence Promoted to general in the new
Zimbabwe National Army, Mujuru oversaw ZANLA's integration into the
Zimbabwe Defence Forces. He was appointed chief of the army following the resignation of Lieutenant-General
Peter Walls, and retired in 1992 to go into business. As a civilian, he became influential in the
Zimbabwe National Liberation War Veterans Association, lobbying for increased veterans' welfare and a prominent stake in the
land reform programme. ==Politics==