logo
Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe dies after June shooting at campaign rally

Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe dies after June shooting at campaign rally

Globe and Mail5 days ago
Miguel Uribe, a Colombian senator who was vying for his party's candidacy in upcoming presidential elections, died on Monday, two months after being shot at a campaign rally. He was 39.
Uribe, a father and stepfather, was shot in the head while giving a campaign speech on June 7 and underwent multiple surgeries during his subsequent hospital stay.
He had shown some improvement during July, but his condition worsened over the past weekend due to a hemorrhage in his central nervous system, the hospital treating him said on Sunday.
The assassination has evoked memories of intense political violence in Colombia's past. In the 1980s and 1990s, four presidential candidates were murdered in separate attacks blamed on drug cartels allied with right-wing paramilitary death squads.
'You'll always be the love of my life,' his wife Maria Claudia Tarazona said on Instagram early on Monday. 'Thank you for a life filled with love, thank you for being a father to the girls, the best dad to Alejandro.'
'I ask God to show me the path to learn to live without you,' she added. 'Rest in peace, love of my life, I will take care of our children.'
Police arrest suspect in shooting of Colombian senator and presidential candidate
The death of Uribe adds further tragedy to his family's fraught history.
His mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was killed in 1991 during a botched rescue mission after she was kidnapped by the Medellin Cartel, headed by drug lord Pablo Escobar.
The family is prominent in Colombian politics. His maternal grandfather, Julio Cesar Turbay, served as Colombia's president from 1978 to 1982, while his paternal grandfather, Rodrigo Uribe Echavarria, headed the Liberal Party and supported Virgilio Barco's successful 1986 presidential campaign.
'Colombia needs leadership, unity and work. Peace cannot be reached through impunity,' Uribe told fellow lawmakers in July 2024, on the opening day of the legislative session. 'Only a serious security policy will incentivize criminals to lay down their arms and submit to the law.'
'Without security there is nothing. Prosperity is reached through opportunities and opportunities with investment, but for there to be investment there need to be clear rules, incentives,' he added.
Uribe himself has enjoyed a rapid political rise, becoming a recognized lawmaker for the right-wing Democratic Center party and presidential hopeful known for his sharp criticism of leftist President Gustavo Petro's administration.
At 25, he was elected to Bogota's city council, where he was a prominent opponent of Petro, then the capital's mayor, criticizing Petro's handling of waste management and social programs.
In 2016, at 30, Uribe was appointed city government secretary, the youngest person to hold the position.
He resigned from that post in 2018 to launch an unsuccessful bid for mayor of Bogota as an independent.
In the 2022 legislative elections, Uribe led the Senate slate for the Democratic Center party with the slogan 'Colombia First,' winning a seat in the chamber.
There, Uribe cemented his role as one of the primary opposition voices to Petro, criticizing the government's peace strategy aimed at ending Colombia's six-decade armed conflict. Uribe said the strategy had backfired, as the government had paused offensives on armed groups as peace talks failed.
He had been running to be chosen as the candidate for the Democratic Center in the 2026 presidential election.
Former President Alvaro Uribe, leader of the Democratic Center party and no relation to the deceased senator, called Miguel Uribe 'a hope for the homeland.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Brazil's former president Bolsonaro temporarily leaves house arrest for medical exams
Brazil's former president Bolsonaro temporarily leaves house arrest for medical exams

CTV News

time5 minutes ago

  • CTV News

Brazil's former president Bolsonaro temporarily leaves house arrest for medical exams

Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro, temporarily allowed out of house arrest for medical exams, leaves a hospital in Brasília, Brazil, Saturday, Aug. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres) SAO PAULO — Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro temporarily left house arrest Saturday to undergo medical exams in Brasilia, after a judge authorized him to spend six to eight hours at a hospital. Doctors at DF Star hospital said Bolsonaro was admitted for evaluation of fever, cough, persistent gastroesophageal reflux and hiccups. Tests revealed residual signs of two recent pulmonary infections, as well as persistent esophagitis and gastritis. He was discharged later in the day and will continue treatment with medication. He has been hospitalized multiple times since being stabbed at a campaign event before the 2018 presidential election. His most recent surgery was in April, for a bowel obstruction. Bolsonaro is on trial at the Supreme Court over his alleged attempt to remain in power after losing the 2022 election to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. A five-justice panel is expected to deliver verdicts and sentences on five counts against him between Sept. 2 and 12. Bolsonaro denies any wrongdoing. The far-right leader has been under house arrest since Aug. 5. Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, who oversees the case, said Bolsonaro violated precautionary measures by spreading content through his three lawmaker sons. A group of fewer than 20 people gathered outside DF Star hospital Saturday, claiming Bolsonaro is a victim of political persecution. Some thanked U.S. President Donald Trump, who has called the prosecution a 'witch hunt' and linked his decision to impose a 50 per cent tariff on Brazilian imports to Bolsonaro's legal troubles. ___ Luís Rua contributed reporting in Brasilia. Follow AP's coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at The Associated Press

Peru's president affirms sovereignty of Amazon River island as tensions with Colombia escalate
Peru's president affirms sovereignty of Amazon River island as tensions with Colombia escalate

CTV News

timea day ago

  • CTV News

Peru's president affirms sovereignty of Amazon River island as tensions with Colombia escalate

Peru's President Dina Boluarte gives a statement to the press during an official visit by Ecuadorean counterpart Daniel Noboa to the government palace in Lima, Peru, Thursday, July 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Guadalupe Pardo) LIMA, Peru (AP) — Peruvian President Dina Boluarte on Friday traveled to an Amazon River island at the center of a territorial dispute with Colombia, where she affirmed Peru's unquestionable sovereignty over the territory. The first visit from Boluarte to the island comes against a backdrop of diplomatic tensions with Colombia, whose president, Gustavo Petro, recently disavowed Peruvian jurisdiction over Santa Rosa Island. Security force chiefs and members of Parliament welcomed Boluarte and Cabinet ministers to the territory, where she sang the Peruvian national anthem as people waved red-and-white flags. 'Unfortunately, for several days now, unacceptable actions have been taking place that affect the brotherhood that unites our two nations and the border communities,' Boluarte said. 'Peru's sovereignty is not in dispute; the district of Santa Rosa de Loreto is Peruvian and will remain so.' Tensions between the neighboring countries escalated Tuesday, when Peruvian police arrested three Colombian men who were on the island doing land surveying work. Colombia's government on Thursday demanded the immediate release of the men after a Peruvian judge freed one of them but ordered the other two remain in jail for seven days while authorities investigate them for the alleged crime of attacking national sovereignty. Colombia's President Gustavo Petro gives a statement during a forum on democracy and multilateralism at La Moneda palace in Santiago, Chile, Monday, July 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix) Colombia's President Gustavo Petro gives a statement during a forum on democracy and multilateralism at La Moneda palace in Santiago, Chile, Monday, July 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix) Petro described the arrests as a 'kidnapping.' His government has said the detainees — a land surveyor and a boat driver — were conducting studies to measure the depth of bodies of water for a pier expansion in the Colombian border city of Leticia. Peruvian authorities said the workers were not authorized to carry out the measurements. The arrest of the two Colombians marks the third binational incident in the area since Petro denied Peru's jurisdiction over Santa Rosa Island on Aug. 5. Two days later, a Colombian military aircraft flew over the island, and on Monday, the former mayor of the Colombian city of Medellín, Daniel Quintero, planted a Colombian flag there. Police later removed the flag. About 3,000 people live in tiny Santa Rosa Island, which emerged in the middle of the Amazon River last century. Peru maintains it owns Santa Rosa Island based on treaties about a century old, but Colombia disputes that ownership because the island had not yet emerged from the river at the time. Amazon A man sails on a river at sunset on a traditional boat in the riverside regions of the city of Portel, located in the island of Marajo, Para state, on the mouth of the Amazon river, Brazil, Friday, Dec. 4, 2020. (AP Photo/Eraldo Peres) ____ The Associated Press

Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal
Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal

CTV News

timea day ago

  • CTV News

Brazil in talks with Canada to revive Mercosur trade deal

Minister of International Trade Maninder Sidhu speaks to journalists as he arrives for a meeting of the federal cabinet in West Block on Parliament Hill in Ottawa. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang BRASILIA/MONTEVIDEO — Brazil is engaged in a 'constructive dialog' with Canada to resume negotiations for a free trade agreement between South America's Mercosur bloc and Ottawa, the Brazilian Foreign Trade Secretary said. Canadian officials are due to visit Brazil in late August, according to Tatiana Prazeres, Brazil's Foreign Trade Secretary, who shared details of the visit in a written response to Reuters this week. Canada signaled renewed interest in restarting talks with Mercosur last month, as part of a broader push to diversify trade away from the United States amid uncertainty caused by tariffs imposed by U.S. President Donald Trump. Sources from both Canada and Brazil told Reuters that Canada's International Trade Minister, Maninder Sidhu, is expected to travel to Brasilia on Aug. 25. Mercosur, which includes Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, with Bolivia in the process of becoming a full member, is a major exporter of beef, soybeans and minerals. Sidhu's visit 'will be an opportunity to assess the conditions for a possible relaunching of negotiations,' Prazeres said, although no formal date has been set to restart them, she added. Talks have been stalled since 2021 as South American countries focussed on local issues such as elections, before Trump's radical policy shifts reset the trade agenda. Two senior diplomatic sources said formal negotiations could resume in late September or early October. Bilateral trade between the U.S. and Canada totaled US$727 billion last year while Canada's trade with Brazil - the biggest Mercosur economy - reached $9.1 billion, with Brazil posting a $3.5 billion surplus. One source monitoring developments said both sides view the Mercosur-Canada agreement as relatively obstacle-free and expect negotiations to take about a year. Prazeres said any formal restart of negotiations, including setting a timetable for talks, would depend on internal coordination within Mercosur. 'Mercosur is willing to evaluate the next steps,' she said. Uruguay's Foreign Ministry told Reuters that 'no new steps' had been taken regarding Mercosur-Canada talks, but confirmed the agreement remains on the bloc's agenda. Argentina's Foreign Ministry declined to comment. (Reporting by Lisandra Paraguassu in Brasilia, Lucinda Elliott in Montevideo. Additional reporting by Maximilian Heath in Buenos Aires. Editing by Alexander Villegas and Toby Chopra)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store