logo
AOC and Bernie Sanders blasted for flying on a private jet during ‘Fight Oligarchy' tour

AOC and Bernie Sanders blasted for flying on a private jet during ‘Fight Oligarchy' tour

Sky News AU24-04-2025

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders have sparked outrage online after they were caught departing a private jet.
AOC and Sanders were seen leaving a private jet that reportedly costs $US15,000 an hour as they made several stops during their 'Fight Oligarchy' tour.
According to Fox News, Sanders and AOC boarded a luxury private jet in Bakersfield, California, on Tuesday following an event in Bakersfield.
Flight records revealed the pair landed in Sacramento Mather Airport on Tuesday evening before hosting a second rally in Folsom, California.
Social media users have since reacted to the pair's departure from the private jet, with many calling AOC and Sanders 'hypocrites'.
'Bernie Sanders and AOC get off their private jet on Earth Day as they 'fight the oligarchy'. Hypocrites!!' wrote one user.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'Doing business' at the White House has become a fool's errand
'Doing business' at the White House has become a fool's errand

The Advertiser

time2 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

'Doing business' at the White House has become a fool's errand

Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras. From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win. First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands. Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand. In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated. Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power. While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks. The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown. It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two. Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas. That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious. That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous. The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic. Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both. Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats. MORE MARK KENNY: It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples. Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison". Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism. In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective. Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity. Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop". He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind. If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it". Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all". Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships. That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart." This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz. The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings. "That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship". No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment. Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras. From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win. First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands. Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand. In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated. Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power. While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks. The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown. It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two. Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas. That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious. That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous. The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic. Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both. Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats. MORE MARK KENNY: It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples. Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison". Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism. In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective. Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity. Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop". He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind. If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it". Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all". Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships. That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart." This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz. The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings. "That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship". No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment. Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras. From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win. First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands. Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand. In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated. Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power. While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks. The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown. It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two. Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas. That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious. That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous. The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic. Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both. Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats. MORE MARK KENNY: It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples. Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison". Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism. In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective. Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity. Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop". He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind. If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it". Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all". Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships. That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart." This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz. The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings. "That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship". No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment. Anthony Albanese hopes to meet Donald Trump in Canada a week from now, with the odds improving that their first face-to-face encounter will occur away from the cameras. From an Australian standpoint, this would be a win. First, because in international affairs, the personality dimension is the only dimension Trump really understands. Second, it is a win because the alternative of "doing business" at the White House has become a fool's errand. In the latter category are the open-ended affairs in an Oval Office "tarted up to look like a Vegas gift shop" (as Maureen Dowd so brilliantly captured it) in which presidents Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Cyril Ramaphosa, respectively, were ambushed. Deliberately humiliated. Such is the abandonment of comportment in this fast-infantilising super-power. While not nailed down, the meeting in Canada could still be a full "bilateral", but even a shorter "pull aside" on the neutral ground of a G7 summit improves the likelihood of their talks being substantive. Trade will dominate with Australia still keen to gain tariff relief based on our ability to supply some 36 of the 38 critical minerals America seeks. The focus on beef and biosecurity in recent days may have been overblown. It is not just that Trump MKII prefers stagecraft over statecraft, it is that this president sees no distinction between the two. Invite the cameras in and visiting leaders become mere extras, or worse, pinatas. That this is an entirely unserious presidency in a time of unrivalled seriousness, is painfully obvious. That a reality TV star and his bloviating defence secretary (poached from Fox News), are dictating the terms of a perilous global rebalancing without any demonstrable record, is downright dangerous. The fact that other world leaders will not call out an inversion where government imitates entertainment, is potentially tragic. Trump leads an administration ad hominem - i.e. modelled on him. Policy is policy because he thinks it. Or says it - sometimes both. Internally, checks and balances are ignored. The broader US government has become coterminous with the White House. This involves an almost Soviet-style allegiance to presidential authority - an allegiance that tolerates breaches of the Constitution, attacks on courts, and wild changes of direction including flagrant retreats. MORE MARK KENNY: It also extends to denying entry to tourists and students whose social media history reveals negative reflections on his administration; dismissal of public officials considered unpatriotic; an open war on universities; and the demonisation of "bad history" - i.e. teaching about slavery and the dispossession of First Peoples. Trump's 1776 Report released in the final days of his first term attacked what he called a "crusade against American history" by woke academics and journalists. He described the 1619 Project by The New York Times which focused on the year slaves were first transferred to Virginia colonies, as "toxic propaganda, ideological poison". Externally, America's foreign policy has lurched into similar personal paroxysms at the cost of nuance, history, respect for alliances, and any grounding in multilateralism. In short, it too mirrors Trump's I-focused perspective. Trump has not grown in the job but rather has managed to shrink its position description to reflect his unique brand of towering ego and incuriosity. Uninterested in either ideas or policy, he sees complex global problems through leaders and deals. Of Zelenskyy he said a fortnight back, "everything out of his mouth causes problems, I don't like it, and it better stop". He never wonders what an American president would or should do were her/his country invaded? Why? Presumably, because this is not America and therefore beyond his self-centric imagining. Thus, threats to the post-war international settlement, liberal democracy, the rule of law, Ukrainian sovereignty - none of these abstract values occupy his mind. If the primary frustration for Trump is Zelenskyy's stubborn refusal to hand over part of his country to an illegal aggressor, the telling phrase for us is Trump's "I don't like it". Turning to the root cause of this colossal tragedy, Trump said of Putin, "I've known him a long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like it at all". Remember, this war was going to be resolved on day one - again, based exclusively on his personal relationships. That day-one bravado has now deflated to this: "Sometimes you see two young children fighting like crazy, they hate each other, and they're fighting in a park, and you try and pull them apart ... sometimes you're better off letting them fight for a while and then pulling them apart." This pearl of inanity, which simultaneously infantilised the warring leaders, simplified their complex perspectives and breezed over thousands of civilian deaths, came in another farcical Oval Office performance - this time with a trapped German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz. The new German leader who is strongly pro-Ukraine had leaned on the president for the kind of decisive leadership America showed in WWII, noting that they were talking on the very eve of the 81st anniversary of the D-Day landings. "That was not a pleasant day for you," Trump interrupted smugly, prompting Merz to point out it had led to "the liberation of my country from Nazi dictatorship". No harm done. American exceptionalism always has another face, the country beyond embarrassment.

Colombia senator's surgery 'went well' after shooting
Colombia senator's surgery 'went well' after shooting

The Advertiser

time12 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Colombia senator's surgery 'went well' after shooting

Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe, a potential presidential contender, has survived an initial operation for his injuries after being shot in Bogota, according to his wife and the hospital treating him, although he remains in intensive care. Uribe, 39, is a member of the opposition conservative Democratic Centre party and was shot in the head during a campaign event in a public park in the Fontibon neighbourhood. A boy under 15 years of age was arrested after the shooting, the attorney general's office said in a statement on Saturday, adding he was carrying a 9-millimetre Glock-type pistol. The government said it is investigating if there were other potential perpetrators. President Gustavo Petro urged an investigation into who had ordered the attack in remarks late on Saturday. Campaigning is just beginning for the country's 2026 presidential election and Uribe, who is from a prominent political family, does not have a well-known platform so far. It was unclear why he was targeted in the attack. Although he has talked about the need to improve security and about having personally suffered in the country's conflict, many other potential candidates, including others from his party, have also said steps must be taken to tackle crime. Uribe's grandfather was president from 1978 to 1982 while his mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was kidnapped in 1990 by an armed group under the command of the late cartel leader Pablo Escobar. She was killed during a rescue operation in 1991. "Miguel came out of surgery, he made it. Every hour is a critical hour. He fought his first battle, and it went well," his wife Maria Claudia Tarazona told local media on Sunday. "This will take time." The couple are parents to a young son. In a statement, the Santa Fe Foundation hospital where Uribe was treated said he had procedures on his head and his left thigh, and remained in intensive care as doctors seek to stabilise his condition. Uribe's party said in a statement that armed subjects shot him from behind. Videos on social media showed a man, identified as Uribe, being tended to after the shooting. He appeared to be bleeding from his head. Bogota mayor Carlos Galan, whose own presidential candidate father was assassinated in 1989, addressed journalists outside the hospital overnight, saying he had asked for increased protection for all candidates in Bogota and for Uribe's family. The Colombian government is offering $US730,000 ($A1.1 million) as a reward for information in the case. "For now there is nothing more than hypothesis," Petro said, adding that failures in security protocols would also be looked into. Uribe had the bodyguard protection provided for senators and other officials. Petro sympathised with Uribe's family in a message on X, saying: "I don't know how to ease your pain. It is the pain of a mother lost, and of a homeland." People gathered outside the hospital in northern Bogota, staging candlelight vigils and praying, while others carried Colombian flags. A march of support was planned for Sunday. Several countries on Sunday including Brazil, Italy, Spain, Uruguay and Paraguay condemned the attack as did the Venezuelan government and opposition. Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe, a potential presidential contender, has survived an initial operation for his injuries after being shot in Bogota, according to his wife and the hospital treating him, although he remains in intensive care. Uribe, 39, is a member of the opposition conservative Democratic Centre party and was shot in the head during a campaign event in a public park in the Fontibon neighbourhood. A boy under 15 years of age was arrested after the shooting, the attorney general's office said in a statement on Saturday, adding he was carrying a 9-millimetre Glock-type pistol. The government said it is investigating if there were other potential perpetrators. President Gustavo Petro urged an investigation into who had ordered the attack in remarks late on Saturday. Campaigning is just beginning for the country's 2026 presidential election and Uribe, who is from a prominent political family, does not have a well-known platform so far. It was unclear why he was targeted in the attack. Although he has talked about the need to improve security and about having personally suffered in the country's conflict, many other potential candidates, including others from his party, have also said steps must be taken to tackle crime. Uribe's grandfather was president from 1978 to 1982 while his mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was kidnapped in 1990 by an armed group under the command of the late cartel leader Pablo Escobar. She was killed during a rescue operation in 1991. "Miguel came out of surgery, he made it. Every hour is a critical hour. He fought his first battle, and it went well," his wife Maria Claudia Tarazona told local media on Sunday. "This will take time." The couple are parents to a young son. In a statement, the Santa Fe Foundation hospital where Uribe was treated said he had procedures on his head and his left thigh, and remained in intensive care as doctors seek to stabilise his condition. Uribe's party said in a statement that armed subjects shot him from behind. Videos on social media showed a man, identified as Uribe, being tended to after the shooting. He appeared to be bleeding from his head. Bogota mayor Carlos Galan, whose own presidential candidate father was assassinated in 1989, addressed journalists outside the hospital overnight, saying he had asked for increased protection for all candidates in Bogota and for Uribe's family. The Colombian government is offering $US730,000 ($A1.1 million) as a reward for information in the case. "For now there is nothing more than hypothesis," Petro said, adding that failures in security protocols would also be looked into. Uribe had the bodyguard protection provided for senators and other officials. Petro sympathised with Uribe's family in a message on X, saying: "I don't know how to ease your pain. It is the pain of a mother lost, and of a homeland." People gathered outside the hospital in northern Bogota, staging candlelight vigils and praying, while others carried Colombian flags. A march of support was planned for Sunday. Several countries on Sunday including Brazil, Italy, Spain, Uruguay and Paraguay condemned the attack as did the Venezuelan government and opposition. Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe, a potential presidential contender, has survived an initial operation for his injuries after being shot in Bogota, according to his wife and the hospital treating him, although he remains in intensive care. Uribe, 39, is a member of the opposition conservative Democratic Centre party and was shot in the head during a campaign event in a public park in the Fontibon neighbourhood. A boy under 15 years of age was arrested after the shooting, the attorney general's office said in a statement on Saturday, adding he was carrying a 9-millimetre Glock-type pistol. The government said it is investigating if there were other potential perpetrators. President Gustavo Petro urged an investigation into who had ordered the attack in remarks late on Saturday. Campaigning is just beginning for the country's 2026 presidential election and Uribe, who is from a prominent political family, does not have a well-known platform so far. It was unclear why he was targeted in the attack. Although he has talked about the need to improve security and about having personally suffered in the country's conflict, many other potential candidates, including others from his party, have also said steps must be taken to tackle crime. Uribe's grandfather was president from 1978 to 1982 while his mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was kidnapped in 1990 by an armed group under the command of the late cartel leader Pablo Escobar. She was killed during a rescue operation in 1991. "Miguel came out of surgery, he made it. Every hour is a critical hour. He fought his first battle, and it went well," his wife Maria Claudia Tarazona told local media on Sunday. "This will take time." The couple are parents to a young son. In a statement, the Santa Fe Foundation hospital where Uribe was treated said he had procedures on his head and his left thigh, and remained in intensive care as doctors seek to stabilise his condition. Uribe's party said in a statement that armed subjects shot him from behind. Videos on social media showed a man, identified as Uribe, being tended to after the shooting. He appeared to be bleeding from his head. Bogota mayor Carlos Galan, whose own presidential candidate father was assassinated in 1989, addressed journalists outside the hospital overnight, saying he had asked for increased protection for all candidates in Bogota and for Uribe's family. The Colombian government is offering $US730,000 ($A1.1 million) as a reward for information in the case. "For now there is nothing more than hypothesis," Petro said, adding that failures in security protocols would also be looked into. Uribe had the bodyguard protection provided for senators and other officials. Petro sympathised with Uribe's family in a message on X, saying: "I don't know how to ease your pain. It is the pain of a mother lost, and of a homeland." People gathered outside the hospital in northern Bogota, staging candlelight vigils and praying, while others carried Colombian flags. A march of support was planned for Sunday. Several countries on Sunday including Brazil, Italy, Spain, Uruguay and Paraguay condemned the attack as did the Venezuelan government and opposition. Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe, a potential presidential contender, has survived an initial operation for his injuries after being shot in Bogota, according to his wife and the hospital treating him, although he remains in intensive care. Uribe, 39, is a member of the opposition conservative Democratic Centre party and was shot in the head during a campaign event in a public park in the Fontibon neighbourhood. A boy under 15 years of age was arrested after the shooting, the attorney general's office said in a statement on Saturday, adding he was carrying a 9-millimetre Glock-type pistol. The government said it is investigating if there were other potential perpetrators. President Gustavo Petro urged an investigation into who had ordered the attack in remarks late on Saturday. Campaigning is just beginning for the country's 2026 presidential election and Uribe, who is from a prominent political family, does not have a well-known platform so far. It was unclear why he was targeted in the attack. Although he has talked about the need to improve security and about having personally suffered in the country's conflict, many other potential candidates, including others from his party, have also said steps must be taken to tackle crime. Uribe's grandfather was president from 1978 to 1982 while his mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was kidnapped in 1990 by an armed group under the command of the late cartel leader Pablo Escobar. She was killed during a rescue operation in 1991. "Miguel came out of surgery, he made it. Every hour is a critical hour. He fought his first battle, and it went well," his wife Maria Claudia Tarazona told local media on Sunday. "This will take time." The couple are parents to a young son. In a statement, the Santa Fe Foundation hospital where Uribe was treated said he had procedures on his head and his left thigh, and remained in intensive care as doctors seek to stabilise his condition. Uribe's party said in a statement that armed subjects shot him from behind. Videos on social media showed a man, identified as Uribe, being tended to after the shooting. He appeared to be bleeding from his head. Bogota mayor Carlos Galan, whose own presidential candidate father was assassinated in 1989, addressed journalists outside the hospital overnight, saying he had asked for increased protection for all candidates in Bogota and for Uribe's family. The Colombian government is offering $US730,000 ($A1.1 million) as a reward for information in the case. "For now there is nothing more than hypothesis," Petro said, adding that failures in security protocols would also be looked into. Uribe had the bodyguard protection provided for senators and other officials. Petro sympathised with Uribe's family in a message on X, saying: "I don't know how to ease your pain. It is the pain of a mother lost, and of a homeland." People gathered outside the hospital in northern Bogota, staging candlelight vigils and praying, while others carried Colombian flags. A march of support was planned for Sunday. Several countries on Sunday including Brazil, Italy, Spain, Uruguay and Paraguay condemned the attack as did the Venezuelan government and opposition.

Colombia senator's surgery 'went well' after shooting
Colombia senator's surgery 'went well' after shooting

West Australian

time13 hours ago

  • West Australian

Colombia senator's surgery 'went well' after shooting

Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe, a potential presidential contender, has survived an initial operation for his injuries after being shot in Bogota, according to his wife and the hospital treating him, although he remains in intensive care. Uribe, 39, is a member of the opposition conservative Democratic Centre party and was shot in the head during a campaign event in a public park in the Fontibon neighbourhood. A boy under 15 years of age was arrested after the shooting, the attorney general's office said in a statement on Saturday, adding he was carrying a 9-millimetre Glock-type pistol. The government said it is investigating if there were other potential perpetrators. President Gustavo Petro urged an investigation into who had ordered the attack in remarks late on Saturday. Campaigning is just beginning for the country's 2026 presidential election and Uribe, who is from a prominent political family, does not have a well-known platform so far. It was unclear why he was targeted in the attack. Although he has talked about the need to improve security and about having personally suffered in the country's conflict, many other potential candidates, including others from his party, have also said steps must be taken to tackle crime. Uribe's grandfather was president from 1978 to 1982 while his mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was kidnapped in 1990 by an armed group under the command of the late cartel leader Pablo Escobar. She was killed during a rescue operation in 1991. "Miguel came out of surgery, he made it. Every hour is a critical hour. He fought his first battle, and it went well," his wife Maria Claudia Tarazona told local media on Sunday. "This will take time." The couple are parents to a young son. In a statement, the Santa Fe Foundation hospital where Uribe was treated said he had procedures on his head and his left thigh, and remained in intensive care as doctors seek to stabilise his condition. Uribe's party said in a statement that armed subjects shot him from behind. Videos on social media showed a man, identified as Uribe, being tended to after the shooting. He appeared to be bleeding from his head. Bogota mayor Carlos Galan, whose own presidential candidate father was assassinated in 1989, addressed journalists outside the hospital overnight, saying he had asked for increased protection for all candidates in Bogota and for Uribe's family. The Colombian government is offering $US730,000 ($A1.1 million) as a reward for information in the case. "For now there is nothing more than hypothesis," Petro said, adding that failures in security protocols would also be looked into. Uribe had the bodyguard protection provided for senators and other officials. Petro sympathised with Uribe's family in a message on X, saying: "I don't know how to ease your pain. It is the pain of a mother lost, and of a homeland." People gathered outside the hospital in northern Bogota, staging candlelight vigils and praying, while others carried Colombian flags. A march of support was planned for Sunday. Several countries on Sunday including Brazil, Italy, Spain, Uruguay and Paraguay condemned the attack as did the Venezuelan government and opposition.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store