The family of Zimbabwe's former strongman Robert Mugabe and government officials appear at odds about where the late leader will be buried.

The government had earlier stated that Mugabe, who died last week at the age of 95, would be buried at the Heroes’ Acre state monument, a burial place reserved for top officials of Zimbabwe’s ruling ZANU-PF party.

However, it seems some family members want to follow Zimbabwean tradition and bury Mugabe at his home village of Kutama.

ROBERT MUGABE, LONGTIME RULER OF ZIMBABWE, DEAD AT 95

President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who declared Mugabe a national hero when he confirmed the death last Friday, said he and the ex-president’s widow, Grace, and other family members will have private discussions over the controversial issue.

"We have no idea where we will bury him yet," said Mnangagwa at the Mugabe family home of Thursday. "We need to talk to Amai (Mrs. Mugabe) and the family first."

Mugabe died last week in a hospital in Singapore following months of an undisclosed illness. His body was returned back to the capital city of Harare on Thursday.

At the airport Wednesday night, Mnangagwa paid tribute to his former ally, calling him an “icon of pan-Africanism” and “the man who created our nation,” Sky News reported.

ROBERT MUGABE DEAD: WHAT HAPPENS TO POLARIZING FORMER FIRST LADY GRACE MUGAGE?

The news about discussions between the president and Mugabe’s widow came after the family blasted the government for not consulting them over the funeral and burial planes.

In a statement posted Thursday, the family accused the government of “attempting to coerce us” to accept a funeral plan that is “contrary to his wishes.”

According to his nephew, the family wants Mugabe’s body to lie in state in his home village of Kutama in Zvimba on Sunday night before a private burial.

"His body will lie in state at Kutama on Sunday night... followed by a private burial - either Monday or Tuesday - no National Heroe’s Acre. That's the decision of the whole family," his nephew Leo Mugabe told the Agence France-Presse news agency.

WHO IS GRACE MUGABE, AFRICA'S MOST POLARIZING FIRST LADY?

It had long been expected that Mugabe would be buried at Heroes' Acre, a monumental burial location atop a prominent hill featuring a grandiose towering sculpture of guerrilla fighters that Mugabe built with help from North Korea. Mugabe's first wife, Sally, is buried there next to a gravesite long reserved for the ex-leader.

Later Thursday the casket is to be taken to Rufaro Stadium in Harare's poor Mbare neighborhood and then to Zvimba, Mugabe's birthplace 55 miles northwest of the capital, where it is expected to stay overnight.

On Friday the casket is to go back to Rufaro stadium and on Saturday a ceremony will be held at the National Sports Stadium, which African heads of state and other prominent officials are expected to attend. Supporters of the ruling ZANU-PF party are being bused from all over the country to go to the stadium ceremonies.

Grace Mugabe is expected to stay beside the casket the entire time.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Mugabe was Zimbabwe’s first leader after the country became independent in 1980. He was ousted from power during a military coup in 2017 after nearly four decades.