Teenage Killer of Colombian Presidential Contender Sentenced to 7 Years

Miguel Uribe Turbay died after being shot three times while holding a campaign rally in the Fontibón neighborhood of Bogotá, Colombia, on June 7.
Teenage Killer of Colombian Presidential Contender Sentenced to 7 Years
A man wearing a T-shirt with the image of Miguel Uribe Turbay, a potential candidate for Colombia's presidency—who later died—holds a candle during a Mass for Uribe Turbay's health in Bogotá, Colombia, on June 21, 2025. Luis Acosta/AFP via Getty Images
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A 15-year-old boy who admitted to inflicting fatal injuries on Colombian Sen. Miguel Uribe Turbay, a potential presidential candidate, when he shot him at a political rally in June was sentenced on Aug. 27 to seven years of detention in a youth rehabilitation facility.

The sentence, announced by the Colombian Attorney General’s Office, was handed down two weeks after Uribe Turbay died from his injuries on Aug. 11.

The attorney general’s office said in a statement that the boy—who has not been identified because of his age—had admitted to attempted homicide and the manufacture, trafficking, carrying, or possession of firearms, accessories, parts, or ammunition during an arraignment hearing on Aug. 4.

On June 7, Uribe Turbay was wounded in the head and left leg when he was shot three times from behind while holding a rally in a park in Modelia in the Fontibón neighborhood of Bogotá, Colombia, as he campaigned ahead of the 2026 presidential elections.

The shooting was caught on camera, and the assassin could be seen stepping out of the crowd to fire several shots.

The boy was arrested near the park, and police also detained several other people.

According to the statement, a judge from Colombia’s adolescent criminal responsibility system sentenced the boy after evaluating the evidence and stipulated that he must remain in a “specialized care center” for seven years.

The attorney general’s office said in the statement, “During the investigation, it was learned that the young man was contacted and convinced to carry out the armed attack.”

Accomplice Allegedly Gave Boy Gun

The statement names José Arteaga Hernández, alias Chipi, as the man who provided the boy with the murder weapon, a Glock 9mm pistol. It notes that he had been driven to the area by another alleged accomplice, Carlos Eduardo Mora González.

It is not clear whether the boy was offered a financial reward or some other inducement for carrying out the shooting.

The Epoch Times was unable to reach out to legal counsel representing Arteaga Hernández or Mora González.

Uribe Turbay was a strong critic of Colombian President Gustavo Petro, who is not eligible for reelection in the May 2026 election.

Uribe Turbay’s grandfather was Julio César Turbay Ayala, who was Colombia’s president between 1978 and 1982.

But he was no relation to former President Álvaro Uribe, who was sentenced to 12 years of house arrest for bribery and witness tampering earlier in August.

Uribe Turbay’s mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was kidnapped by Pablo Escobar’s Medellín Cartel in 1991. She was then killed during a botched rescue mission.

Her death became the basis for Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez’s 1996 book, “News of a Kidnapping.”

Uribe Turbay was first elected as a Bogotá city councilor at age 25. He represented the Liberal Party, which his grandfather had represented.

Since 2022, he represented Democratic Centre, a conservative party, as a senator.

Uribe Turbay’s father, Miguel Uribe Londoño, entered the presidential race on Aug. 26, saying he wanted to keep his son’s legacy alive.

Candidate’s Father Makes Presidential Bid

At a launch event in Bogotá, Uribe Londoño, 72, said: “Together we can build a secure Colombia where people will not fear going out into the streets and where business owners will not have to make extortion payments [to gangs].

“A democratic Colombia, where the government does not foment divisions between the rich and the poor, whites or blacks, or those who are on the left or on the right.”

Uribe Londoño was a senator for Colombia’s Conservative Party in the early 1990s but gained prominence during his son’s nationally televised funeral on Aug. 13, when he delivered a speech in which he said the country had descended into “madness” under Petro.

Colombian President Gustavo Petro at the Palacio de la Moneda in Santiago, Chile, on July 21, 2025. (Rodrigo Arangua /AFP via Getty Images)
Colombian President Gustavo Petro at the Palacio de la Moneda in Santiago, Chile, on July 21, 2025. Rodrigo Arangua /AFP via Getty Images

Uribe Londoño is one of five candidates running to be the Democratic Centre’s candidate in the May 2026 election.

With Petro, a former member of the M-19 terrorist group, unable to stand in the election, eight people are seeking to become the candidate for his Historic Pact for Colombia, a multiparty coalition.

Petro was elected in 2022 and pledged to fully implement a 2016 peace agreement with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, which ended its 52-year insurrection.

He also said he would persuade another terrorist group, the National Liberation Army, to lay down its arms, but in January, he suspended talks with the group.

On Aug. 21, seven people were killed when a dissident group linked to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia set off a car bomb outside a military base in Cali, Colombia’s third-largest city.
On the same day, in the province of Antioquia, leftist rebels shot down a helicopter conducting anti-narcotics operations, killing 13 police officers.

Petro has attempted to broker peace deals with the nation’s remaining rebel groups and granted many of them cease-fires in an effort to boost negotiations. These peace talks have yielded few results, and critics of the president say they have helped the rebel groups to become stronger.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Chris Summers
Chris Summers
Author
Chris Summers is a UK-based journalist covering a wide range of national stories, with a particular interest in crime, policing and the law.