Former Colombian President Uribe found guilty in bribery trial that threatens the strongman’s legacy

Colombia's former President Alvaro Uribe attends a mass at the San Jose Church in Medellin, Colombia. (AFP)
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Updated 29 July 2025
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Former Colombian President Uribe found guilty in bribery trial that threatens the strongman’s legacy

  • The former president, who governed from 2002 to 2010 is a polarizing figure in Colombia, many credit him for saving the country from becoming a failed state, while others associate him with human rights violations

BOGOTA: Former Colombian President Álvaro Uribe was convicted of witness tampering and bribery Monday in a historic trial that gripped the South American nation and threatened to tarnish the conservative strongman’s legacy.
The ruling followed a nearly six-month trial in which prosecutors presented evidence that Uribe attempted to influence witnesses who accused the law-and-order leader of having links to a paramilitary group founded by ranchers in the 1990s.
Uribe, 73, was not in court in the capital, Bogota, for the verdict as the judge has so far not ordered his arrest. He followed the ruling from his home outside Medellin but did not immediately speak about it.
Uribe faces up to 12 years in prison but a sentencing will be delivered in a separate hearing. He is expected to appeal the ruling.
The former president, who governed from 2002 to 2010 with strong support from the United States, is a polarizing figure in Colombia, where many credit him for saving the country from becoming a failed state, while others associate him with human rights violations and the rise of paramilitary groups in the 1990s.
While the ruling was read, Uribe’s opponents clashed briefly with his supporters outside the courthouse.
In a ruling that lasted more than 10 hours, Judge Sandra Heredia said there was enough evidence to determine that Uribe conspired with a lawyer to coax three former members of paramilitary groups who were in prison into changing testimony they had provided to Ivan Cepeda, a left-wing senator who had launched an investigation into Uribe’s alleged ties to a paramilitary group.
The case dates to 2012, when Uribe filed a libel suit against Cepeda with the Supreme Court. But in a twist, the high court dismissed the charges against Cepeda and began investigating Uribe in 2018.
During Uribe’s presidency, Colombia’s military attained some of its biggest battlefield victories against Latin America’s oldest leftist insurgency, pushing the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia into remote pockets and forcing the group’s leadership into peace talks that led to the disarmament of more than 13,000 fighters in 2016.
Known for his tireless work ethic and short temper, Uribe still has legions of followers in Colombia and is one of the fiercest opponents of the current president, former leftist guerrilla Gustavo Petro.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio reacted to the ruling, as it became evident that Judge Heredia was going to find the former president guilty of bribery.
“Uribe’s only crime has been to tirelessly fight and defend his homeland” Rubio wrote on Monday on X. “The weaponization of Colombia’s judicial branch by radical judges has now set a worrisome precedent.”
Colombian President Gustavo Petro defended the ruling, writing on X that “a strong justice system” will enable Colombia to emerge from violence. He added in another message that Rubio was interfering with Colombia’s sovereignty.
“The world must respect the judges of Colombia” Petro wrote.
Heredia said that her ruling should not be interpreted as “a victory for anyone” but as “an act of justice.”
Critics also blame Uribe for state crimes. According to a truth commission created in 2017, more than 6,400 civilians were executed by the Colombian military and identified as members of rebel groups by soldiers seeking promotions during the conflict, in a phenomenon that peaked during the Uribe administration.
Prosecutors accused Uribe of sending lawyers to meet with imprisoned former paramilitary henchmen and pressure them to drop testimony that they had provided to Senator Cepeda.
During the trial, Uribe denied trying to flip witnesses but acknowledged seeking interviews with the men as part of his preparation for trial and to verify testimonies that were also being used in a murder trial against his brother, Santiago Uribe, who was also accused of ties to the armed paramilitaries.
Cepeda spoke to journalists after the ruling, and said that he would continue to fight for “truth and justice” for victims of Colombia’s conflict. “No one can defy and taint the rule of law,” he said.


Trump administration steps up efforts to scrutinize foreign funding of universities

Updated 7 sec ago
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Trump administration steps up efforts to scrutinize foreign funding of universities

  • US colleges and universities disclosed 8,300 transactions totaling $5.2 billion in 2025 — which includes funding from governments as well as private companies and individuals

WASHINGTON: The Trump administration is stepping up work to uncover what it sees as malign foreign influence at US colleges ​and universities, officials said on Monday as they announced that the State Department would assist the Department of Education in that effort. President Donald Trump has threatened to cut federal funding to universities over issues such as pro-Palestinian protests against US ally Israel’s war in Gaza, transgender policies, climate initiatives and diversity, ‌equity and inclusion programs, ‌raising free speech and ​academic ‌freedom concerns. Trump ⁠in April ​2025 issued ⁠an executive order calling for enforcement of Section 117 of the Higher Education Act, which requires colleges that receive federal funding to report gifts or contracts worth more than $250,000 from any foreign source, and the Department of Education in December launched a new portal for ⁠universities to report that funding.
Under Secretary ‌for Public Diplomacy Sarah ‌Rogers said the State Department’s new role ​would “ensure an invigorated compliance assurance ‌effort by the federal government.”
“The Department of ‌State will be applying our national security expertise and our expertise countering foreign malign influence to bolster oversight efforts by the Department of Education,” Rogers told reporters in a briefing ‌at the State Department.
Officials declined to spell out specific examples of how foreign funding had ⁠unduly influenced ⁠higher education institutions, and said they were primarily seeking to boost compliance by the universities and improve transparency. The US Senate subcommittee on investigations in 2019 issued a report documenting China’s impact on the US education system, sparking renewed enforcement of the disclosure rules. US colleges and universities disclosed 8,300 transactions totaling $5.2 billion in 2025 — which includes funding from governments as well as private companies and individuals, the education department said ​in a statement. The ​largest source of funding last year was Qatar ($1.1 billion), followed by Britain ($633 million) and China ($528 million), it said.