Colombia buried murdered presidential candidate, Miguel Uribe, on Wednesday, with his widow tearfully warning that the country must shake its dark and long history of political violence.
The 39-year-old conservative senator was shot in June while campaigning in the capital, Bogota, and died this week of his injuries.
βOur country is going through the darkest, saddest, and most painful days,β Maria Claudia Tarazona told a packed cathedral funeral service as she prepared to bury her husband.
Police have blamed Uribeβs murder on left-wing guerrillas who shunned the 2016 peace accords. Six people have been arrested in connection with the alleged plot.
For most Colombians, the assassination represented a shocking spasm of political violence after years of relative peace.
Four presidential candidates were assassinated during the 1980s and 1990s, as drug cartels and various armed groups terrorised the country.
Uribeβs mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was killed in a botched 1991 police operation to free her from cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobarβs Medellin cartel.
On Wednesday, Uribeβs father, Miguel Uribe Londono, remembered the day 34 years ago when she was killed.
βWith all the pain in my soul, I had to tell a little boy of barely four years old the horrendous news of his motherβs murder,β he said at the service.
βIn this same holy cathedral, I carried Miguel in one arm and the coffin of his mother, Diana, in the other.β
βToday, 34 years later, this senseless violence also takes from me that same little boy,β he said.
As Colombia reels from the assassination, conservative lawmaker Julio Cesar Triana, a vocal critic of the government, escaped unharmed after his vehicle came under fire in the southern Huila region, where dissident members of the defunct FARC guerrilla group are operating.
President not at funeral
Uribeβs wife vowed at the funeral that his death at the hands of a suspected 15-year-old hitman would not be in vain and that his young son and stepdaughters would live a life filled with love.
βMiguel, I will love you every day of my life until my time comes to meet you in heaven,β she said.
βI promise to give Alejandro and the girls a life full of love and happiness, without hatred and without resentment.β
Colombia will hold elections in 2026 to replace incumbent leftist leader Gustavo Petro, who is constitutionally barred from running again.
President Petro, himself a former guerrilla, said he chose not to attend Wednesdayβs funeral at the familyβs request.
βWeβre not going, not because we didnβt want to,β he posted on social media. βWe simply respect the family, and we avoid the funeral of Senator Miguel Uribe from being taken over by supporters of hateβ.
It was expected that some of those marking their respects may have booed the president, who has taken a conciliatory approach to armed groups.
That stance has been strongly criticised by those on the right wing of Colombian politics.
Former presidents Juan Manuel Santos, Ernesto Samper, and Cesar Gaviria attended the funeral.
PUNCH.
