What Happened to Colonel Gaddafi’s 143 Tons of Gold After His Death?
Muammar Qaddafi was the president of Libya and a dictator who ruled Libya for quite a long time. He was also known as Colonel Gaddafi. He was accused of many crimes and the rebels were after him.
The rebels tracked him down near his hometown, Sirte. Gaddafi was hiding in the sewerage pipe when they dragged him out and pushed along the road by the people where he was shot in his head and he fell to death.
He died on October 20, 2011, only 8 months after the revolutionary movement initiated against his rule.
Libya was a wealthy and powerful country with many oil reserves, before Qaddafi’s death, his sidekicks and right-hand people in Libyan Government accumulated more than140 tons of Sovereign Gold.
The government of Libya had plans to use that Gold for the development of the country, only if Qaddafi & Co, his allies wouldn’t have literally looted and hidden it for no good or of any use for the people of the country.
It was said that before his death Gaddafi sold a fifth of Libyan gold reserves. The odds are that the profit earned from this business deal is missing.
Moreover, Gaddafi invested his money in secret companies and made a deposit of some of his money in secret bank accounts. It was and is still claimed that Gaddafi owned between $100 million and $200 million.
He earned millions of dollars through offshore companies in which he made obscure appointments making them secure par beyond anyone’s reach and nontraceable to the real owners.
The prominent yet missing figure in the search for Gaddafi money is a man Bashir Saleh Bashir who was once Libyan leader’s chief of Staff and, of course, right-hand man to Qaddafi. In Libya, he is known as Gaddafi banker.
He is alleged to have invested and hidden Gaddafi’s private wealth and he used to manage multi-billion dollars’ branch of Libyan state fund. The people said Gaddafi pocketed the money himself.
After Qaddafi’s death, his name was included in Panama papers and as a result, Bashir became wanted.
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tag: international-news , legal
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