The house where Adolf Hitler spent his early childhood on in Braunau am Inn, Austria | Johannes Simon/Getty Images Austria to seize Hitler’s house

Austria said Saturday it plans to seize the house Adolf Hitler' was born in from its private owner to end a legal dispute and to prevent it from becoming a gathering point for Nazi sympathizers.

"We are currently examining the creation of a law, which would force a change of ownership and pass the property to the Republic of Austria," Interior Ministry spokesman Karl-Heinz Grundböck told AFP.

Hitler was born in the house located in the town of Braunau am Inn in April 1889. The building has been empty since 2011 when a dispute broke out between the Austrian government and the house's owner Gerlinde Pommer.

The plan to seize the house would involve a compensation to the Pommer family, who has owned the house for more than a century.

In the early 1970s, the government signed a lease with Gerlinde Pommer and turned the house into a center for people with disabilities. The deal ended five years ago when Pommer unexpectedly refused to grant permission for much-needed renovation works.

"We have come to the conclusion over the past few years that expropriation is the only way to avoid the building being used for the purposes of Nazi" sympathizers, the interior ministry spokesman said.

The Austrian interior ministry also offered to purchase the house, which Pommer refused. Braun am Inn, a town of around 17,000 residents, has been debating what to do with the house.

According to the BBC, Hitler's name does not appear in the house but outside there is a stone inscribed with the words: "For Peace, Freedom and Democracy. Never again Fascism. In memory of millions of dead."

The story was updated to correct the spelling of the Pommer family in the fourth paragraph.