How Colombia’s former president helped kick-start the Medellin Cartel

Colombia’s former President Alvaro Uribe became a major asset to the Medellin Cartel after the controversial politician was appointed director of the country’s civil aviation agency in 1980.

Before that, the Uribe family was already close to the Ochoa crime family, which helped late drug lord Pablo Escobar form the cartel, the former President told newspaper El Tiempo in 2002.

But it was during 1978 and 1982, the year that Uribe left civil aviation agency Aerocivil, that the drug trade of Escobar and his partners really started making money, according to late Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara, who was murdered by cartel assassins in 1984.

Late Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara

The murder that got Uribe appointed

Fernando Uribe

Escobar and one of his main former associates, Carlos Lehder, began flying cocaine from Colombia to Florida via the Bahamas after 1975.

This was raising suspicion with civil aviation chief Fernando Uribe who announced in 1979 he was going to enforce the law over a growing number of illegal airstrips used by the narcos.

The Aerovil chief didn’t make it until the end of the year. He was shot five times and died in Medellin in December 1979.

El Tiempo

Uribe’s cartel years


Uribe goes on a narco-licenses binge

President Julio Cesar Turbay appointed the 28-year-old Alvaro Uribe as the new Aerocivil chief in January 1980.

Instead of going against the cartel, the new Aerocivil chief told press he wanted to “decentralize airports”.

Uribe’s “decentralization” binge resulted in him granting more licenses in 18 months than Aerocivil had done in 40 years.

Almost one in 10 of the licenses ended up in the hands of associates of Escobar, Lehder and Ochoa, according to senior journalist Ignacio Gomez.

Journalist Ignacio Gomez

Colombian press found out in 1983 after a new director was appointed to Aerocivil, that among others, Uribe granted two airplane licenses to Lehder’s sister, and five to the brother and three to the cousin of Gonzalo Rodriguez a.k.a. “El Mexicano”.

According to Escobar’s former hitman “Popeye” and former mistress Virginia Vallejo, Uribe also authorized the airstrip on Escobar’s legendary estate Haciendo Napoles.

“Popeye”

Uribe personally gave the order to grant Antonio Correa a license for a Hughes 500D helicopter, which would get the family in trouble in 1984, according to Aerocivil documents.

The same documents showed that Israel Londoño, a brother-in-law of the Ochoas, received a license for a Bell 206 helicopter, which got Uribe accused of murder in 2006.

Uribe gets caught, but gets away

In 1981, former Latin America’s editor Joseph Contreras, discovered that ironically, it was the father of President Ivan Duque, who was governor of Antioquia at the time, who first rang the bell in 1981 after finding out that Uribe had granted a flight route to convicted drug trafficker Jaime Cardona.

According to Contreras, Duque Sr. called Uribe and told him that “in case you didn’t know, this is a businessman who is linked to the mafia.”

Uribe told the governor stone cold that Cardona was “a good man.”

The license was revoked after Duque Sr. personally reported the incident to the president, but neither the president’s father nor Turbay did much else and Uribe remained in his post until Turbay left office in August 1982.


When Ivan Duque’s dad confronted Alvaro Uribe over Medellin Cartel licenses


Escobar gets caught, but doesn’t get away

Rodrigo Lara

Escobar took office in the House of Representatives on July 20, 1982, one month before President Belisario Betancur (Conservative Party) took over from Turbay.

Betancur appointed Uribe Mayor of Medellin, which didn’t go very well as he lasted only 112 days.

Escobar was forced to stop pretending he was a legitimate politician in 1983 after Lara, who was appointed justice minister in August that year, revoked many of the licenses Uribe had granted to the cartel in September.

“The airplanes converted drug trafficking into a major threat to the country,” the minister told journalists. Among the suspended helicopter licenses was that of the Bell 206 helicopter Uribe’s father bought from the cartel just before his death in June.

Former Justice Minister Rodrigo Lara

Uribe gets linked to Escobar and people start dying

The Uribe family helicopter at “Tranquilandia”

Uribe really got in trouble when the National Police and the Drug Enforcement Administration discovered Tranquilandia, the Medellin Cartel’s largest cocaine factory, in March 1984.

During that raid, the police found the Hughes 500 helicopter Uribe had licensed to Correa, but turned out to be property of president Uribe’s late father.

Colonel Jaime Ramirez, who led the Tranquilandia operation, reportedly told investigators that Lara had warned him that “if they were going to try to kill him it would be the owners of what we seized in Yari.”

“I asked him to explain and he told me: ‘Yes, the owners of the helicopter and the airplanes that were confiscated in Yari’,” Ramirez reportedly said. The colonel was murdered by cartel assassins in 1986.

A 20-year-long trail of blood

Pedro Juan Moreno

The justice minister and the top counternarcotics cop weren’t the last to die in relation to the helicopters found at Tranquilandia and confiscated by Lara.

The Bell 206, which was licensed by Uribe personally in June 1980 and confiscated in September 1984 reappeared, albeit in pieces in 2006 with the body of Pedro Juan Moreno, Uribe’s former chief of staff, inside it.

While Uribe was governor of Antioquia in the late 1990’s, Moreno was his alleged intermediary with paramilitary group AUC, specifically “Don Berna,” who inherited Medellin crime syndicate Oficina de Envigado from Escobar .

Human Rights Watch investigator Maria MacFarland

Berna on multiple occasions admitted that his paramilitary group sabotaged the helicopter in which Moreno was campaigning in 2006 at the orders of Uribe.

Related posts

Former president maintains control over Colombia’s Liberal Party

UN Security Council extends monitoring of Colombia’s peace process

Defense minister believes Pegasus spyware no longer used in Colombia