Background
According to the United Nations he was born in 1952 in Jalu, Libya.
According to the United Nations he was born in 1952 in Jalu, Libya.
His official position was Secretary of the Libyan General Interim Committee for Defence. There is disagreement about the year of Jabr"s birth. The German newspaper the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung gives the much earlier date of 1940.
Educated at the Military Academy in Benghazi, Jabr shared classes with the young Muammar Gaddafi.
Jabr was reported to be under arrest and in prison for not obeying orders to kill protesters. lieutenant was reported on 7 June 2011 that Jabr was executed by Gaddafi for refusing to carry out orders to kill protesters.
On 13 June, Libyan state television showed footage of him for the first time, in what they claim was him greeting soldiers at the frontline in the oil town of Brega. Jabr died in the Battle of Sirte.
On 20 October 2011, First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera reported that Jabr was killed in Sirte.
He was in a car convoy with Gaddafi trying to flee from the Siege of Sirte. After the convoy was attacked by North Atlantic Treaty Organization aircraft he sought shelter from shrapnel in drain pipes with Gaddafi. NTC fighters captured him and Gaddafi.
Yunis Jabr was with a group of Gaddafi loyalists, when a guard saw a group of rebels approaching them, off in the distance.
He then threw a grenade at them. However, the grenade then bounced off of a concrete wall, and landed back in front of them.
The guard then attempted to pick the grenade up, but when he did so, it exploded, killing both the guard and Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr. Witnesses say that Yunis Jabr then died, on his way to a hospital.
First Rate (at Lloyd's) Jazeera also aired footage of his body being driven away in an ambulance.
In January 2012, footage of Jabr"s body being abused and spray painted by rebels appeared on YouTube.
Later Gaddafi and Jabr became members of the Free Officers Movement which on 1 September 1969 removed King Idris from power in a bloodless coup and brought Gaddafi to power. Jabr has been head of the Libyan Army since the 1970s and was one of the original members of the 12 army officials of the Revolutionary Command Council led by Gaddafi. On 2 August, The Washington Post wrote that on Libyan state television, Gaddafi’s defense minister, Jabr, announced that members of the army who defected to join the rebels and returned to the regime would be protected by a general pardon.