Where was the former Libyan Leader, Muammar Gaddafi, Buried?
Following his capture and death in Sirte on 20 October 2011, Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC) opted for a hidden burial to prevent the site from becoming a shrine for his loyalists or a target of vandalism for his opponents.

Muammar Gaddafi is reportedly buried in an unmarked, secret grave at an undisclosed location deep within the Libyan Desert.
Following his capture and death in Sirte on 20 October 2011, Libya’s National Transitional Council (NTC) opted for a hidden burial to prevent the site from becoming a shrine for his loyalists or a target of vandalism for his opponents.
But it is being revealed that the exact coordinates remain a closely guarded state secret.
Muammar Gaddafi was buried alongside his son, Mutassim Gaddafi, and his former defense minister, Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr.
The three bodies were transported from Misrata and buried at dawn on the 25th day of October 2011.
According to accounts shared by a number of international media outlets such as the BBC, the bodies were washed, wrapped in white shrouds, and given Islamic funeral prayers by a few individuals, including Gaddafi’s personal cleric, Sheikh Khaled Tantoush.
The selected few individuals who carried out the burial took a strict religious oath on the Quran never to reveal the geographic location.
The location must be kept in writings concealed in some vaults, awaiting the time when Libya becomes stable again.

Though certain militia leaders involved in the burial have occasionally claimed readiness to reveal the location during times of political negotiation, the official site remains completely unknown to the public.
Known as Muammar Muhammad Abu Minyar al-Gaddafi
The Tripoli headman was a Libyan military officer, revolutionary, and authoritarian leader who ruled the North African country from a 1969 coup until his overthrow and death in 2011.
Gaddafi established the Jamahiriya system under his self-styled Third Universal Theory, funding social programs with oil revenues while suppressing dissent and sponsoring foreign militant groups.
His anti-Western stance shifted to rapprochement in the 2000s, but the Arab Spring uprising led to the upsurge of rebels backed by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) who eventually managed to kill him in Sirte.
During the 1978-79 war between Tanzania and Uganda, Gaddafi was reported to have backed the army belonging to Idd Amin, the former President of Uganda.
After Idd Amin was ousted, a number of Libyan soldiers were captured by Tanzanian fighters and sent back to Tripoli.
