After the
fall of Tripoli to forces of the opposition NTC in August 2011, Gaddafi and his family escaped the Libyan capital. He was widely rumored to have taken refuge in the south of the country. In fact, Gaddafi had fled in a small convoy to Sirte on the day Tripoli fell. His son,
Mutassim Gaddafi, followed in a second convoy. On 19 October 2011, Libya's
prime minister,
Mahmoud Jibril, said that Gaddafi was believed to be in the southern desert, reestablishing his government among pro-Gaddafi tribes in the region. By that point, the NTC had just taken control of the pro-Gaddafi town of
Bani Walid and were close to taking control of Gaddafi's home town, the tribal heartland of Sirte, east of Tripoli. According to most accounts, Gaddafi had been with heavily armed regime loyalists in several buildings in Sirte for several months as NTC forces took the city.
Mansour Dhao, a member of Gaddafi's inner circle and leader of the regime's
People's Guard, said that Gaddafi was "very delusional" and complained about the lack of electricity and water. Attempts to persuade him to flee the country and give up power were ignored. About 08:30 local time (06:30
UTC) on 20 October 2011, Gaddafi, his army chief
Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr, his security chief Mansour Dhao, and a group of loyalists tried to escape in a convoy of 75 vehicles. A
Royal Air Force Panavia Tornado during a
reconnaissance mission spotted the convoy moving fast, after NATO forces intercepted a satellite phone call made by Gaddafi. A NATO aircraft then fired on 21 of the vehicles, destroying one. An American
Predator drone controlled from a base near
Las Vegas continued the bombing. The NATO bombing immobilized much of the convoy and killed dozens of loyalist fighters. After the first strike, the convoy split into several groups, with a subsequent strike destroying 11 vehicles. Rebel units on the ground also struck the convoy. It is unclear whether NATO aircraft were involved in Gaddafi's capture by Libyan forces on the ground. Mutassim then took 20 fighters and went to look for undamaged cars, having persuaded his father to come too. "The group belly-crawled to a sand berm", according to a
United Nations report published in March 2012, and then through two drainage pipes and set up a defensive position. A group of rebels approached the pipe where Gaddafi was hiding and ordered him to come out, which he did slowly. He was then dragged up to his feet as rebels shouted "Muammar, Muammar!" A United Nations report published in March 2012 gave a different account of Gaddafi's capture. Gaddafi was wounded by fragments of a grenade thrown by one of his own men, which bounced off a wall and fell in front of Gaddafi, shredding his
flak jacket. He sat on the floor dazed and in shock, bleeding from a wound in the left temple. Then one of his group
waved a white turban in surrender. Gaddafi can be heard in one video saying "God forbids this" and "Do you know right from wrong?" when being shouted at by his captors. In a video of his arrest he can be seen lying on the hood of a
Toyota truck, held by rebel fighters. A senior NTC official said that no order was given to execute Gaddafi. Several videos related to the death were shown on television and circulated on the internet. The first shows footage of Gaddafi alive, his face and shirt bloodied, stumbling and being dragged toward an ambulance by armed militants chanting "
God is the Greatest" in
Arabic. Another shows Gaddafi, stripped to the waist, suffering from an apparent gunshot wound to the head, and in a pool of blood, together with jubilant fighters firing automatic weapons in the air. Another video shows him being stripped naked and verbally abused by his captors. Gaddafi's body was taken to Misrata, where a doctor's examination ascertained that he had been shot in the head and abdomen.
Public display The interim Libyan authorities decided to keep Gaddafi's body "for a few days", NTC oil minister
Ali Tarhouni said, "to make sure that everybody knows he is dead". The body was moved to an industrial freezer where the public was allowed to see it until 24 October. Some people traveled hundreds of kilometers to see proof that Gaddafi was dead. One reporter observed gunshot residue on the wounds, consistent with shots at close range.
Burial Although an NTC spokesman said Gaddafi's body would be returned to his family with a directive to keep his burial site secret after an autopsy had determined the cause of death, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch called for an independent autopsy and an investigation into how Gaddafi died, While the NTC rejected conducting an autopsy, it promised to investigate the incident. On 25 October 2011, NTC representatives announced that Gaddafi's body had been buried in a secret grave in the desert early that morning, along with those of his son and Jabr. A Dubai-based satellite TV channel,
Al Aan TV, showed amateur video of the funeral, where Islamic prayers were read. Libya's minister for information,
Mahmoud Shammam, said that a
fatwa had declared that "Gaddafi should not be buried in Muslim cemeteries and should not be buried in a known place to avoid any
sedition". noting that a U.S. Predator drone was involved in the airstrike on Gaddafi's convoy in the moments before his death. An anonymous U.S. official subsequently described their policy in hindsight as "lead[ing] from behind". Because Libyan rebels had consistently told American government officials that they did not want overt foreign military assistance in toppling Gaddafi,
covert military assistance was used (including arms shipments to the opposition). The plan following Gaddafi's death was to immediately begin flowing humanitarian assistance to eastern Libya and later western Libya, as the symbolism would be critically important. U.S. sources stressed it as important that they would "not allow Turkey, Italy and others to steal a march on it". == Concurrent capture or death of relatives and associates ==