logo
Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe dies months after shooting at rally

Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe dies months after shooting at rally

New York Post16 hours 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.
Advertisement
7 Miguel Uribe died two months after being shot at a campaign rally.
AFP via Getty Images
7 Forensic experts work at the crime scene where Senator Miguel Uribe was shot and wounded at a campaign rally. He succumbed to his injuries months later.
AFP via Getty Images
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.'
Advertisement
'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.'
7 Colombian Senator Miguel Uribe's wife, Maria Claudia Tarazona, reacts after her husband was shot.
REUTERS
The death of Uribe adds further tragedy to his family's fraught history.
Advertisement
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.
7 People help carry Miguel Uribe's body to an ambulance after he was shot.
via REUTERS
'WITHOUT SECURITY, THERE IS NOTHING'
Advertisement
'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.
7 Miguel Uribe was vying for his party's candidacy before he succumbed to his injuries from a shooting.
REUTERS
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.
7 Miguel Uribe was shot in the head at the rally. He was 39 when he passed away.
AFP via Getty Images
Advertisement
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.
7 A man holds a crucifix as he prays outside the Clinic Fundación Santa Fe, where Miguel Uribe was receiving treatment.
AFP via Getty Images
Advertisement
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

Photos of mourning for Colombian Sen. Miguel Uribe, who died 2 months after shooting at a rally
Photos of mourning for Colombian Sen. Miguel Uribe, who died 2 months after shooting at a rally

Associated Press

time27 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Photos of mourning for Colombian Sen. Miguel Uribe, who died 2 months after shooting at a rally

BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) — Colombian mourned Miguel Uribe, 39, an opposition senator and presidential hopeful who died after being shot at a political rally two months ago. Uribe was shot three times while giving a campaign speech in Bogota and had been in intensive care since the attack. Uribe's wife Claudia Tarazona and father Miguel Uribe were among the attendees as his coffin was carried through Congress in Bogota. This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

Hegseth says DC National Guard will not be involved in law enforcement functions but he'll ‘have their back' if they need to ‘temporarily detain' criminals
Hegseth says DC National Guard will not be involved in law enforcement functions but he'll ‘have their back' if they need to ‘temporarily detain' criminals

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Hegseth says DC National Guard will not be involved in law enforcement functions but he'll ‘have their back' if they need to ‘temporarily detain' criminals

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Monday detailed when Washington, DC residents can expect to see National Guard troops patrolling the nation's capital and what they'll be allowed to do to combat crime in the city. The Pentagon chief said Guardsmen from DC and 'other states' will be deployed to the district 'this week and in coming weeks' and act as 'force multipliers' for local and federal law enforcement, in an interview on Fox News' 'The Ingraham Angle.' 3 Hegseth said it will be up to Trump how long the National Guard remains on the streets of Washington, DC. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement 'Under Title 32, which is the authorization they'll be using, they have broad latitude, but they're not going to be involved in law enforcement functions,' Hegseth continued, likening the military's role in DC to the June deployment of National Guard and US Marine service members to Los Angeles to protect federal law enforcement from protesters during immigration raids. 'They will be standing right alongside our federal agents, like they were in Los Angeles. They're going to be proactive. If you take an action or a shot at them, there will be a consequence,' he said. When asked by host Laura Ingraham what National Guard troops will do if they see a crime in progress, Hegseth responded, 'They can come alongside and assist law enforcement.' Advertisement 'What if law enforcement isn't on that corner?' Ingraham pressed. 'I will have their back to ensure they can take the necessary action to protect citizens of DC and to protect themselves,' the defense secretary said. 'There's no rogue law enforcement going on from the National Guard,' Hegseth insisted. 'But there's also the application of common sense.' 3 Hegseth likened the DC mobilization to the deployment of some 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 US Marines to Los Angeles earlier this summer. Getty Images Advertisement 'We're not going to have the National Guard just sitting there … seeing a crime committed [and] not do something about it.' 'You can help somebody interdict, temporarily detain, like we did in Los Angeles, and hand over to law enforcement those types of things,' he continued. 'The National Guard can be trained to do that.' President Trump activated 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marine service members to California in June amid violent anti-ICE riots in Los Angeles. By July 1, nearly all of the National Guard members and Marines had been released, with around 300 still in the city. Advertisement 3 Hegseth indicated that Guardsmen in DC would be able to 'temporarily detain' individuals if they see a crime in progress and local police aren't around. Allison Bailey/NurPhoto/Shutterstock Hegseth did not say how many Guardsmen would be activated in DC, or how long they will patrol the city. 'I would call this 'conditions-based,'' he said. 'I would say it's a situation where we're here to support law enforcement, and the more we can free them up to do their job, the more effective they can be.' 'I don't know – weeks, months? What will it take? That's the president's call, but we're going to be there for him to execute as swiftly as possible.' The president has direct control over DC's National Guard, unlike every other unit, which is under the authority of state governors. Trump signed an executive order Monday mobilizing the DC National Guard as part of an effort aimed at 'restoring law and order in the District of Columbia.' 'Washington, DC, should be one of the safest, cleanest and most beautiful cities anywhere in the world,' Trump said of his plans, 'and we're going to make it that.'

Exclusive-Fistful of dollars and rice for Vietnam farmers displaced for $1.5 billion Trump golf club
Exclusive-Fistful of dollars and rice for Vietnam farmers displaced for $1.5 billion Trump golf club

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Exclusive-Fistful of dollars and rice for Vietnam farmers displaced for $1.5 billion Trump golf club

By Khanh Vu and Francesco Guarascio HUNG YEN, August 11 (Reuters) -Vietnamese farmer Nguyen Thi Huong has slept poorly since authorities told her to vacate her farm for a Trump family-backed golf resort, offering just $3,200 and rice provisions in return. The golf resort, for which construction is scheduled to begin next month, is offering thousands of villagers such compensation packages to leave the land that has provided their livelihood for years or decades, according to six people with direct knowledge and documents seen by Reuters. The project is the first partnership for the family business of U.S. President Donald Trump in Vietnam, which fast-tracked approvals as it negotiated a crucial trade deal with Washington. Developers are now cutting compensation forecasts from an initial estimate exceeding $500 million, said one person familiar with the plans who declined to elaborate on reasons for the reduction. The 990-hectare site designated for the golf course currently supports fruit farms growing bananas, longan, and other crops. While some see opportunity, many farmers are elderly and fear they will struggle to find alternative livelihoods in Vietnam's vibrant economy with its largely young demographic. "The whole village is worried about this project because it will take our land and leave us jobless," said 50-year-old Huong, who was told to leave her 200-square-metre (2152.78 square-feet) plot in Hung Yen province near capital Hanoi for less than the average pay for one year in Vietnam. Vietnamese real estate company Kinhbac City and its partners will develop the luxury golf club after paying the Trump Organization $5 million for brand licensing rights, according to regulatory filings and a source familiar with the deal. Trump's family business will run the club once completed, but is not involved in the investment and in compensation to farmers. Trump has said his assets in the businesses are held in a trust managed by his children, but disclosures in June showed income from those sources ultimately accrues to the president. Vietnam's agriculture ministry, Hung Yen authorities, the Trump Organization and Kinhbac City did not reply to questions on compensation rates. Authorities will determine final compensation rates based on land size and location, with formal approval expected next month. Five farmers facing dispossessions said authorities flagged reimbursements worth between $12 and $30 per square metre of farmland. They also offered additional payments for uprooted plants and provisions of rice for some months, roughly in line with one document seen by Reuters. The person familiar with the compensation plan said the range was accurate, declining to be named because the information was not public. A local official declined to talk about the compensation but said rates for farmland in the area have usually not exceeded $14 per square metre. They are often higher in other provinces. In Communist-run Vietnam, farmland is managed by the state. Farmers are assigned small plots for long-term use but have little say when authorities decide to take the land back. Protests are common but usually fruitless. Compensation is paid by the state but developers foot the bill. Four of the farmers contacted by Reuters were not happy with the proposed rates because their small plots would produce low payments. Thousands of villagers will be affected, according to a second document from local authorities seen by Reuters, which stated final payment decisions were expected next month. Huong leases a larger plot from other villagers, but can claim land compensation only for the small one assigned to her and for the plants she grows. "What can someone like me do after that?" RICE FOR LAND Vietnam's Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh said farmers would be reimbursed fairly when he spoke in May at the groundbreaking ceremony for the golf project to an audience that included Trump's son Eric, a senior vice president of the Trump Organization. "We have no right to negotiate. That's a shame," said Do Dinh Huong, another farmer who was told his plot would be compensated at roughly $12 per square metre. He said he would have accepted what he believed was a low rate if the land were to be used to build roads or other public infrastructure. "But this is a business project. I don't know how that would contribute to people's life." Authorities have also offered rice as compensation, with provisions varying from two to twelve months, according to one of the documents seen by Reuters. Nguyen Thi Chuc, a 54-year-old farmer who grows bananas in what will become the Trump golf club, was told by authorities she might receive roughly $30 per square metre for her 200-square-metre plot. "I'm getting old and can't do anything else other than working on the farm," she said. Conversely, lawyers and investors in the province said the golf club would create better jobs and enrich villagers. Le Van Tu, a 65-year-old local who will be compensated for his small plot and owns an eatery in a village that the golf club will abut, said he will upgrade his diner into a restaurant to cater to wealthier clients. Land prices in the village have risen fivefold since the project was announced in October, he said. He was also happy a nearby pig farm will be gone: "It won't be stinky anymore." Solve the daily Crossword

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