Mugabe to get hero's burial as family settles spat over his final resting place
Robert Mugabe's legacy is complicated02:22
Harare (CNN)Former Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe will be buried in the country's National Heroes Acre monument as a spat over his final resting place is settled.
The family, who said in a statement that the government did not initially consult them on burial plans, had previously insisted the former president would be laid to rest in his hometown of Kutama, west of the capital city, Harare.
A memorial will be held on Saturday, he will then be given a ceremonial send off at Harare's National Heroes Acre monument on Sunday, but his funeral will be held there as a private affair at a later, undisclosed date, the younger Mugabe told CNN on Friday.
"Burial will be done later at the National Heroes Acre. So when the rituals are done the family will do a private burial at the National Heroes Acre," Leo Mugabe said.
Mugabe's family had been at loggerheads with the current President of Zimbabwe Emmerson Mnangagwa over where Robert Mugabe's funeral should take place.
They wanted to bury him in his home town while the government insisted on the burial at the hilltop monument where the country's national heroes are laid to rest.
Crunch meeting
A crunch meeting was held Thursday at Mugabe's mansion Blue Roof, Harare but ended in a stalemate and the family released the terse statement, accusing the government of "coercing them."
Relations have since thawed as both parties appear to have reached an agreement and Mugabe will join other distinguished Zimbabweans at the Heroes Acres -- but not before traditional burial rites are performed by elders from his village.
"On Sunday, we will have a normal government burial function, which normally happens at the Heroes Acre and then the 21 gun salute. But we will not do the actual burial on Sunday. We will take him away. The traditional leaders have asked for some time to perform traditional rituals," Leo Mugabe told CNN.
Mugabe's body is currently in a football stadium in Harare for a public open casket viewing as the country observes four days of mourning.
Soldiers welcome Mugabe's body at the airport in Harare
Thousands of Zimbabweans walked through Harare's Rufaro Sports Stadium to pay their last respects to the late leader who died in a Singaporean hospital last Friday.
At least five people were carried away on stretchers following a stampede when thousands thronged the stadium to view Mugabe's body.
A bittersweet legacy
Although celebrated in death, Mugabe's legacy in Zimbabwe is a bittersweet one.
While many revere him as the nation's founding father who stood up to the British colonials and helped his country gain independence, his latter years in power were marked by brutality and violence towards his own citizens.
Yet many still choose to mourn him and celebrate him as a national hero when his body arrived in the country.
Thousands of jubilant supporters gathered to witness the arrival and one said: "He is home to Rest.. The Giant of Zimbabwe."
Zimbabwean TV host and producer Vimbai Mutinhiri told CNN: "The Mugabe I knew was a quick-witted man, with an incredible sense of humor and a totally disarming presence. And he loved patriotic, young people."
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Asante sana. Iwe neni tine basa. Rest In Peace Comrade Robert Gabriel Mugabe, Gushungo!! 💔
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Mutinhiri, whose father served as a diplomat during Mugabe's regime, had a chance to meet him several times and as a young child even pinned a rose on his lapel during a visit to their home in Yugoslavia where her father was the ambassador.
Mugabe also threw a special banquet in her honor when she represented Zimbabwe in the reality show Big Brother Africa in 2011.
"My personal experience is distant to the reality of many," she said. "But this is why it is important for me to share it because while his public roles will face more scrutiny and judgment than ever, it is important to also keep the moments and gestures of love and goodwill that Robert Mugabe extended alive and to celebrate them as a part of his legacy," the Nigeria-based TV personality said.
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