Presidential candidate says he won’t return to Colombia, then changes his mind

Rodolfo Hernandez (Screenshot: Twitter)

Presidential candidate Rodolfo Hernandez will return to Colombia on Saturday after telling journalists he would stay in Miami due to an alleged kill plot.

In a press conference, Hernandez claimed he would stay in Miami and had canceled all public appearances because of alleged plans to “stab” him on his return to Colombia.

The runner-up in the first round accused his opponent, opposition Senator Gustavo Petro, of leading a “criminal gang” that is “willing to do anything to get to power” on Twitter.

Hernandez subsequently announced that he would return to Colombia on Saturday.


The alleged corruption of runner-up in Colombia’s election race


The alleged kill plot

At the press conference, the liberal demagogue said that he “received a warning” that people would take advantage of supporters welcoming the candidate on his return to Colombia to stab him.

Presidential candidate Rodolfo Hernandez

The 77-year-old Hernández predicted that “I’m so tough that I won’t die and stay in a wheelchair” in the event of a knife attack.

The liberal demagogue presented no evidence to support his conspiracy theory.

Attacks against Petro

Leaked video of Petro campaign meeting (Screenshot: El Tiempo)

Hernandez published a series of tweets on social media platform Twitter in which he claimed that Petro’s campaign team was a “criminal gang” and reiterated the existence of an assassination plot.

Hernandez claimed that a leaked video in which Petro’s team discussed campaign strategies to confront defeated candidate Sergio Fajardo “demonstrates they are a criminal gang.”

The video was leaked a day after media showed videos of meetings with leaders of Fajardo’s now-defunct “Center Hope Coalition” apparently recorded by the demagogue’s campaign.

Criminal charges over “espionage”

Petro’s campaign manager, Alfonso Prada, said that he would file criminal charges over the “infiltration and espionage” of the opposition campaign.

Petro campaign manager Alfonso Prada

According to Prada, the two leaked recordings were from 10 and two months ago and released 10 days before the election in an attempt to derail the opposition campaign.

The run-off election between Petro and Hernandez is set for June 19 and has become increasingly tense.

Contradicting polls suggest that the difference in support for the two candidates is marginal.

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