Tag: Marco Rubio

  • Former Colombian President Convicted in Unprecedented Ruling

    Former Colombian President Convicted in Unprecedented Ruling

    Former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe was found guilty Monday of procedural fraud and bribing witnesses, becoming the first head of state in the country’s history to be convicted.

    Judge Sandra Heredia read the lengthy ruling, spanning over 10 hours, in a decision that analysts say could significantly impact Colombia’s 2026 presidential elections.

    Uribe, who led Colombia from 2002 to 2010, remains the most prominent opposition figure to current President Gustavo Petro’s administration.

    The trial originated 13 years ago from a political debate in Congress between Uribe and Senator Ivan Cepeda of the governing party. During the debate, Cepeda insinuated Uribe’s alleged links to extreme right-wing paramilitary groups in Colombia. In response, Uribe denounced Cepeda before the Supreme Court of Justice, alleging that the senator had irregularly sought testimonies from imprisoned ex-paramilitaries across the country to link him to these illegal armed groups.

    However, in 2018, the Supreme Court of Justice found insufficient evidence to proceed against Senator Cepeda and closed his case. In the same ruling, the court ordered an investigation into Uribe himself for alleged witness tampering aimed at discrediting his political adversary. The former leader was effectively accused of manipulating testimony.

    In 2020, the court ordered Uribe’s home detention. Prior to this judicial decision, the former president resigned from his Senate seat, which moved his case to the ordinary justice system. He was formally charged with bribery, procedural fraud and witness tampering in May 2024.

    Subsequently, the Colombian Prosecutors’ Office attempted to close the case against Uribe, but their petition was denied.

    Throughout the process, the former president has consistently maintained his innocence, asserting that the proceedings are politically motivated revenge.

    Uribe could face a prison sentence of between six and 12 years following this conviction.

    Experts anticipate this legal dispute will play a pivotal role in the presidential elections next May, given Uribe’s status as the country’s most prominent right-wing figure, and warn that the ruling could further exacerbate political polarization. Outside Bogota’s Paloquemao courthouse, where the verdict was delivered, supporters and opponents of Uribe engaged in several confrontations.

    The case has also drawn significant attention from US political figures, who have expressed concern that Colombia’s judicial system is being weaponized against the former president and have even threatened to cut financial aid to the country.

    On Monday, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio defended Uribe on his X account.

    “Former Colombian President Uribe’s only crime has been to tirelessly fight and defend his homeland. The weaponization of Colombia’s judicial branch by radical judges has now set a worrisome precedent,” he said.

    Senator Bernie Moreno, also via his official X account, earlier in July voiced concern regarding the trajectory of Uribe’s judicial case and its implications for the bilateral relationship between Colombia and the United States.

    “Colombia needs to stop using its judicial system as a weapon against former President Alvaro Uribe. It is a very dangerous path for what should be one of the United States’ principal allies in Latin America,” he said.

  • Trump Exempts Kenya-Led Haiti Mission From Funding Freeze, Secretary Rubio Confirms To Ruto

    Trump Exempts Kenya-Led Haiti Mission From Funding Freeze, Secretary Rubio Confirms To Ruto

    The United States has exempted the Kenya-led Multinational Security Support (MSS) Mission in Haiti from a funding freeze impacting US-funded international aid initiatives.

    US Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed the position on Thursday in a telephone call with President William Ruto, State House reported.

    Ruto and Rubio reaffirmed “our mutual commitment to strengthening our existing cooperation,” a dispatch reporting the conversation stated.

    “Our discussion confirmed that the United States has specifically exempted its support for the Multinational Security Support (MSS) Mission in Haiti from the broader pause on federal assistance, recognizing the critical need to sustain momentum for the mission and its role in stabilizing Haiti and restoring order,” President Ruto asserted.

    President Ruto’s confirmation of the funding status of the mission came as Kenya dispatched the fourth contingent of police officers serving under the MSS in Haiti on Thursday.

    The 144 officers add to the 600 already stationed in Port-au-Prince.

    Ruto’s National Security Advisor, Ambassador Monica Juma, had indicated that the US would exempt the MSS from aid cuts, allaying fears of a crippling funding freeze.

    Juma’s statement followed reports that the US had issued a stop order on funding for the Kenya-led Haiti Multinational Security Support Mission, potentially plunging the UN-backed campaign into a funding crisis.

    “It is true the U.S. contribution to the UN Trust Fund for MSS Haiti is on pause, affecting about USD 15 million in support. It is also true that the MSS mission is a priority and a beneficiary of the waiver,” Juma said.

    “Meanwhile, there are sufficient funds in the UN Trust Fund for Haiti from other countries (approximately USD 110 million) to continue operations,” she explained.

    Funding appeal

    AFP had quoted Stéphane Dujarric, the UN Secretary-General’s spokesperson, as saying the move would impact USD 13.3 million in pending aid.

    “We received an official notification from the U.S. asking for an immediate stop-work order on their contribution,” Dujarric told AFP.

    Funding gaps, however, have remained a significant hurdle for the mission since Kenya deployed troops in June 2024.

    The mission’s funding has topped President Ruto’s agenda with US officials, including during his State Visit to the United States in September 2024.

    Prior to his arrival in Washington, Ruto had made a detour to Port-au-Prince, where he met Kenyan troops to reassure them of support amid concerns over delays in the provision of security hardware and financial assistance.

    President Joe Biden’s administration had provided USD1.7 million out of its USD15 million pledge to a voluntary fund set up to support the mission, while Canada committed USD63 million.

    The UN has raised USD110 million since the fund’s inception, an amount deemed insufficient to support the desired 2,500-member security mission.

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres has repeatedly called for international support, warning that Haiti’s capital could become overrun by gangs.

    President Ruto’s phone call with Secretary Rubio also included a discussion on the forthcoming Joint Summit of the EAC and SADC, which he is set to co-chair on Saturday with President Emmerson Mnangagwa of Zimbabwe.

    The Joint Summit, to be hosted by President Samia Suluhu in Dar es Salaam, will review the security situation, including the humanitarian crisis, in eastern DRC, where M23 rebels took over the city of Goma following intense fighting with government and SADC forces.

  • El Salvador Offers To Lock Up US Criminals In Its Mega-Jail

    El Salvador Offers To Lock Up US Criminals In Its Mega-Jail

    El Salvador has offered to take in criminals deported from the US, including those with US citizenship, and house them in its mega-jail.

    The deal was announced after US Secretary of State Marco Rubio met Salvadorean President Nayib Bukele during his visit to the central American nation.

    Bukele – whose iron-fist approach to gangs has won him plaudits from voters but been heavily criticised by human rights groups – said he had offered the US “the opportunity to outsource part of its prison system”.

    Rubio said the US was “profoundly grateful” to Bukele, adding that “no country’s ever made an offer of friendship such as this”.

    Rubio told reporters: “He has offered to house in his jails dangerous American criminals in custody in our country, including those with US citizenship and legal residency.”

    Referring to two of the region’s most notorious transnational crime gangs, Rubio added that El Salvador would also take in deported migrants and “criminals from any nationality, be the MS-13 or Tren de Aragua”.

    Bukele later confirmed the offer on X, specifying that “we are willing to take in only convicted criminals (including convicted US citizens) into our mega-prison (CECOT) in exchange for a fee”.

    He added that “the fee would be relatively low for the US but significant for us, making our entire prison sustainable”.

    Since he came into office in 2019, Bukele has made cracking down on crime his government’s priority.

    The newly built maximum-security jail he referred to, Cecot [Terrorism Confinement Centre], is at the centre of his drive to lock up and punish the most violent gang members.

    The government celebrated the opening of the jail – which it says can hold up to 40,000 inmates – by releasing photos and videos of shaven-headed and tattooed prisoners stripped down to the waist being frogmarched along its corridors.

    The treatment of inmates at Cecot, where up to 80 prisoners are locked up in each windowless cells, has been criticised by rights groups.

    US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (R) meets with El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele at his residence at Lake Coatepeque in El Congo municipality, El Salvador, on February 3, 2025. AFP

    But Bukele’s crackdown on crime continues to be very popular with the vast majority of Salvadoreans who say they can go about their lives without threats from gang members for the first time in years.

    However, some relatives of the tens of thousands of people which have been rounded up and jailed under emergency measures brought in by Bukele say their loved ones have been wrongfully rounded up in sweeping police round-ups.

    Amnesty International has criticised the “gradual replacement of gang violence with state violence” in the country – a criticism dismissed by Bukele, who points out that his hardline approach to crime last February won him re-election to a second term with more than 84% of the votes.

    El Salvador was the second stop on Secretary of State Rubio’s first overseas tour as the US top diplomat.

    His first stop was Panama, where he demanded that Panama make “immediate changes” to what he called the “influence and control” of China over the Panama Canal.

    On Tuesday, he will hold meetings with officials in Costa Rica and Guatemala expected to focus on migration as well as countering Chinese influence in the region.

    Since coming to office, US President Donald Trump has focused on speeding up the removal of undocumented migrants, with the promise of “mass deportations”.

    (BBC)