
Ex-Colombian president Álvaro Uribe found guilty of witness-tampering
Uribe is best known for mounting an aggressive offensive against leftist guerrilla group the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) during his tenure. He has always denied ties to right-wing paramilitaries.The former president sat shaking his head as the verdict was read out, AFP reported, in the trial that has seen more than 90 witnesses testify.US Secretary of State Marco Rubio has condemned the court's decision, accusing the country's judiciary of being weaponised.The former president's "only crime has been to tirelessly fight and defend his homeland," he wrote on the social media site, X.The result comes more than a decade after Uribe was first charged in 2012. At that time, he accused a left-wing senator, Ivan Cepeda, of a plot against him. Uribe claimed Cepeda wanted to falsely link him to right-wing paramilitary groups involved in Colombia's internal armed conflict.But the country's Supreme Court dismissed the former president's claims against Cepeda, instead investigating Uribe for the ties. The former president was then accused of contacting jailed ex-fighters and bribing them to deny connections to the paramilitary groups - tampering with key witnesses.Uribe said he had wanted to convince the ex-fighters to tell the truth.
Paramilitary groups emerged in Colombia in the 1980s with the stated goal of taking on poverty and marginalisation. They fought the Marxist-inspired guerrilla groups that had themselves battled the state two decades prior. Many of the armed groups developed in the standoff made an income from the cocaine trade. Violent and deadly fighting between them and with the state has produced lasting rivalries for trafficking routes and resources.Uribe was praised by Washington for his hard-line approach to Farc rebels – but was a divisive politician whose critics say did little to improve the inequality and poverty in the country.Farc signed a peace deal with Uribe's successor in 2016 though violence from disarmed groups persists in Colombia.
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They knew there was a 'mother ship' in the area so went to take a look and the RHIB sped off. For 28 miles the three men in the RHIB stayed ahead of the Border Force boat, tipping overboard packages of what turned out to be cocaine. The chase ended on Gwynver beach near Land's End, when the three – Peter Williams, 44, Scott Johnston, 38, and Edwin Yahir Tabora Baca, 33 – were arrested. A Garmin chart plotter and knives were found. The men had ditched 11 bales of cocaine into the water. Border Force officials recovered six of them, worth about £18m. A team of NCA officers was dispatched from London to Cornwall. 'We deployed fast time,' said Vinall. 'It was all hands to the pump. We needed to gather as much information of what they'd been up to and who they were.' They found out that Williams was a fisher by trade. He is a familiar figure at Emsworth harbour in Hampshire, where he ran a fishing outfit and fishmonger's called Fresh from the Boat. 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After the RHIB was spotted and the chase began, Johnston phoned Willis from the boat, presumably telling him it had all gone wrong, before dumping his phone in the sea. The three Essex men immediately left the area in a white van and a BMW. Another vital clue was a sticker on the RHIB from a marine company in north Wales. The NCA contacted the company and found it had been bought by Alex Fowlie, 35, from West Sussex, for £70,000 a few months earlier. He is the seventh man involved and seen as a key facilitator. Fowlie was so confident that he would not be found that while the Asdo was in progress, he was enjoying a mini-break with his partner close by – in the north Cornwall surfing town of Newquay. 'It was a strange place to go when there's a drug importation coming in,' said Vinall. 'But he was there posting pictures all over Facebook.' Losing some product and some smugglers is an occupational hazard. Three days after the Gwynver Beach chase – at which point he thought he was in the clear – Fowlie was arranging another Asdo pickup. 'We're good to get a team ready,' he told an accomplice in a message the NCA found. 'We just need the fisherman and one of us go out with him and they send one of their lads to keep an eye on things. 'You've got your radars. If you see anything coming towards you, just drop it back in. It's got its GPS and then we come out with the RHIBs and grab it after. It's zero fucking risk.' Not quite. Tabora Baca, Johnston, Willis and May were given hefty sentences for conspiracy to import class A drugs on Friday 1 August. The rest are being sentenced for the same offence on Thursday 21 August.