Vice President Kembo Mohadi completed a strategic tour of Zimbabwe's liberation war heritage sites across Angola, Tanzania, Zambia, and Mozambique between August 18 and September 6, 2025. Information Minister Jenfan Muswere announced that Cabinet received and noted the comprehensive report from this regional assessment. The tour evaluated historical significance while identifying preservation gaps at these important locations. Officials documented cultural and political importance of sites that shaped Zimbabwe's independence struggle. The assessment created opportunities for strengthened bilateral cooperation with host nations.
Mohadi's recommendations emphasized infrastructure improvements and educational integration through the Education 5.0 framework. Authorities proposed establishing a Joint Liberation Heritage Commission to oversee preservation efforts. Tourism development and oral history projects emerged as priorities for transferring knowledge between generations. The Vice President examined Tanzania's Bagamoyo Freedom Fighters Training Camp, operational from 1963 to 1975, which trained President Mnangagwa and other liberation leaders. Nachingwea Training Camp processed 15,000 fighters through three training programs between 1976 and 1978.
Mohadi's recommendations emphasized infrastructure improvements and educational integration through the Education 5.0 framework. Authorities proposed establishing a Joint Liberation Heritage Commission to oversee preservation efforts. Tourism development and oral history projects emerged as priorities for transferring knowledge between generations. The Vice President examined Tanzania's Bagamoyo Freedom Fighters Training Camp, operational from 1963 to 1975, which trained President Mnangagwa and other liberation leaders. Nachingwea Training Camp processed 15,000 fighters through three training programs between 1976 and 1978.