Tongogara was one of several rebel commanders operating from outside of Rhodesia's borders to free the country from white rule. In 1973 he took over command from
Herbert Chitepo of the
armed forces of the
Zimbabwe African National Union. And in 1975, he put down an internal revolt by members of the
Manyika tribe and consolidated that control with the assistance of
Mujuru, aka Rex Nhongo. Herbert Chitepo, who may have encouraged the Manyika revolt, was killed by a car bomb that year, and a Special International Commission in
Zambia found Tongogara, among others, responsible. At the
Lancaster House Agreement in 1979, Tongogara was a crucial "moderating" force, according to
Lord Carrington, the then British
Foreign Secretary, who chaired the talks. By then Tongogara openly favoured unity between
ZANU and
Joshua Nkomo's
ZAPU. "Robert Mugabe referred to unity with Zapu as sharing the spoils with those who had not shouldered the burden of fighting," says Wilfred Mhanda, a former ZANLA commander who was imprisoned in Mozambique for allegedly leading an internal revolt within the party. As Lancaster House concluded, Tongogara returned to
Mozambique, where ZANLA was based, to inform his soldiers of the ceasefire. Among them was
Margaret Dongo, who, aged fifteen, had crossed into
Mozambique to join the guerrillas, adopting the
chimurenga (liberation war) name of Tichaona Muhondo ("we shall see/resolve this in the battle"). ==Death==