

Miguel Uribe, a candidate in the 2026 Colombian presidential election, was shot three times, including twice in the head, during a campaign event in Bogota Saturday, June 7, paramedics said.
The 39-year-old right-wing opposition senator suffered two gunshot wounds to the head and one to the knee, according to the medical personnel who treated him. A video circulating on social media shows 39-year-old Miguel Uribe giving a speech in front of several people when gunshots suddenly ring out. In other images he appears slumped against the hood of a white car, smeared with blood, as a group of men try to hold him up.
Media reported the suspected shooter was a teenager who had been arrested. Attorney General Luz Adriana Camargo told Caracol Radio that Uribe was in "intensive care."
The government of leftist President Gustavo Petro said it "categorically and forcefully" condemned the attack on Uribe during the campaign event in the west of the capital. "This act of violence is an attack not only against his person, but also against democracy, freedom of thought, and the legitimate exercise of politics in Colombia," the presidency said in the statement.
Uribe, a strong critic of Petro, is a member of the Democratic Center party, who announced last October his intention to run in the 2026 presidential election.
His party said in a statement Saturday that an "armed individual" had shot the senator from behind. The attack "not only endangers the life of a political leader, but also threatens democracy and freedom in Colombia," it said.
The party leader, Colombia's influential former president Alvaro Uribe, meanwhile described the shooting as an attack against "a hope for the country." Bogota Mayor Carlos Galan said on X that "the shooter has been captured."
Local media reported that a 15-year-old boy had been arrested and was suspected of pulling the trigger. Attorney General Camargo said she had seen those reports but that the information had yet to be verified.
Miguel Uribe is a member of a family with a long political tradition in Colombia. One of his grandfathers was former Colombia president Julio Cesar Turbay, who led the country from 1978 to 1982.
And his mother, Diana Turbay, was a renowned journalist who was kidnapped by the Medellin Cartel, led by the notorious drug lord Pablo Escobar, and who was killed in a failed military rescue operation in 1991.
Uribe himself has been a senator since 2022. He previously served as Bogota's government secretary and city councilor. He also ran for city mayor in 2019, but lost that election.