The remains of the 22-year-old were flown to Tripoli in Libya, the country of his origin, where the burial was conducted, according to 'The Sun'.
But he was still reportedlydenied an Islamic burial ceremony.
"After Manchester mosques refused to bury the remains of terrorist Salman Abedi, British authorities allowed his family to move him to Libya, where he was buried in Tripoli," claims Noman Benotman, of anti-extremist think tank Quilliam.
Libya is a hotspot for the Islamic State (ISIS) terror network and Abedi is believed to have been trained in bomb- making by an ISIS explosives expert, a former car mechanic from the West Midlands region of the UK.
The news of his burial emerged as another media report claims the UK's intelligence officials missed key warnings that could have put the Manchester bomber under surveillance as a "high-priority" target.
'The Sunday Times' reports that the failure to act properly on the intelligence emerged in an MI5 internal review sent to UK Home Secretary Amber Rudd.
"And when a target is judged a high priority, you should place them under surveillance. The greater the threat, the more resources you deploy for surveillance," he added.
The detailed analysis of all intelligence received in the build-up to the Manchester attack on May 22 is understood to focus on information passed to an MI5 regional office.
While the information was not considered of high significance when received, it was judged upon reassessment to be enough to have raised serious alarms about Abedi.
Salman Abedi blew himself up at the end of the Grande concert in one of the deadliest terrorist attacks in Britain.
The 22 victims included seven children and more than 500 people were injured, with 112 people needing hospital treatment after the attack and 64 suffering "very serious" injuries.
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