Philip Valerio Sibanda Explained

Honorific-Prefix:General
Philip Valerio Sibanda
Office:Commander of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces
Term Start:18 December 2017
President:Emmerson Mnangagwa
Predecessor:Constantino Chiwenga
Office1:Commander of the Zimbabwe National Army
Term Start1:December 2003
Term End1:18 December 2017
President1:Robert Mugabe
Emmerson Mnangagwa
Predecessor1:Constantino Chiwenga
Birth Place:Zimbabwe
Nationality:Zimbabwean
Profession:Senior Military Commander

Philip Valerio Sibanda (born 24 December 1954) is a decorated Zimbabwe general who has served as commander of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces since December 2017. He was promoted from lieutenant general to full general at that time. As lieutenant general he had served as commander of the Zimbabwe National Army.[1] [2]

Personal life

General Sibanda grew up in Midlands Province in what was at the time Southern Rhodesia.[3] He attended the newly opened Marist Brothers Secondary School in Dete.[4]

Rhodesian Bush War

During the Rhodesian Bush War, Sibanda trained and served as a ZIPRA military combatant. Sibanda left the country in 1973. He received military training at Morogoro under the likes of Retired Brigadier Ambrose Mutinhiri. His alias was Ananias Gwenzi. In 1974 after completing his training in Tanzania him and four others: Elisha Gagisa (Stanely Nleya), Elias Ndou, Abel Mazinyane and Joel Dambudzo were sent to Lebanon where they spent 9 months of rigorous training under the Palestinian Liberation Organization at Jalub. He even saw combat against the Israelis in his dreams. Upon his return in 1975, he became an instructor at the newly opened Mbwembwesi training camp in Tanzania. He was then seconded to form part of the military commanders running Morogoro under the ZIPA. Among the Morogoro-based Zanla Commanders in ZIPA were Contsantine Chiwenga (commissar), Perence Shiri and Augustine Chihuri (Stephen Chocha). From ZIPRA there was Eddie Sigoge Mlotshwa and Sam Fakazi. He also became the commander of the GC-B region.

After Nikita Mangena was killed by the enemy in 1978, Sibanda became camp commander for the CGT (Communist Guerrilla Training) camp, located about 60 miles east of Lusaka. He was initially appointed to the ZIPRA High Command as chief of training however he swapped that position with Eddie “Sigoge” Mlotshwa for Chief Of Reconnaissance leading the Military Intelligence department.

After independence

Sibanda was attested into the Zimbabwe National Army at independence. He quickly rose through the ranks, by 1994 he was the only ex-ZIPRA cadre to have risen to the rank of major general.

Between October 1995 and April 1998 he became the head of United Nations Angola Verification Mission (UNAVEM III) and subsequently MONUA (Mission d’Observation des Nations Unies à l’Angola) as the Force Commander charged with peace and national reconciliation.[5] [6]

Notes and References

  1. News: The Zimbabwe National Army . https://web.archive.org/web/20120207020306/http://www.mod.gov.zw/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=51&Itemid=57 . 7 February 2012 . unfit .
  2. Book: Rasmussen . R. K. . Rubert . S. C. . 1990 . A Historical Dictionary of Zimbabwe . second . . Metuchen, New Jersey . 449 . 978-0-8108-2337-2 .
  3. Web site: Philip Valerio Sibanda . 26 August 2021 . Pindula . https://web.archive.org/web/20220204130403/https://www.pindula.co.zw/Philip_Valerio_Sibanda . 4 February 2022 . live .
  4. Web site: Marist Brothers Secondary School: A Brief History . 25 January 2012 . Marist Old Students Association (MOSA) . Dete, Rhodesia. 28 January 2012 .
  5. News: Zimbabwe's Hopes of a Better Future Hinges on the Last Professional Commander in the Army . December 2017 . PaZimbabwe News .
  6. News: Razemba . Freeman . 12 October 2018 . Angola hails General Sibanda . . Harare, Zimbabwe . https://web.archive.org/web/20181012122803/https://www.herald.co.zw/angola-hails-general-sibanda/ . 12 October 2018 . live .