Police in the Colombian city of Medellin have captured the sibling of previous president Alvaro Uribe on charges of homicide and trick.
Santiago Uribe has been blamed for setting up a paramilitary gathering known as the Twelve Apostles in the 1990s.
It has been connected to the vanishingshttp://www.studyabroad.com/members/mehndiurdu/default.aspx? of many left-wing rebels, drug addicts and crooks in the Antioquia locale.
He denies any association with the famous demise squad.
The principle witness for the situation is a previous cop, Major Juan Carlos Meneses, who said that a significant number of the wrongdoings conferred by the demise squad were arranged in the Uribe family's ranch.
Formally dressed paramilitaries started preparing at the La Carolina farm, in the town of Yarumal, in 1994, said Maj Meneses.
'Peace with exemption'
Nearby police were paid to choose not to see to the exercises of the demise squad in the region, he included.
Alvaro Uribe got to be legislative leader of Antioquia region around that time.
He went ahead to serve two terms as president (2002-2010) and is presently a representative contrary to President Juan Manuel Santos.
Mr Meneses says he has no confirmation associating the previous president to the paramilitary gathering.
Alvaro Uribe has been extremely vocal in his feedback of the peace transactions Mr Santos has been holding with the Farc since November 2012.
"Peace with exemption is unsustainable,http://forum.covecube.com/profile/102446/mehendesin it is an awful point of reference, an awful sample," he told writers in Miami in January.
The two sides are relied upon to sign a peace accord in the not so distant future.
Supporters of the previous president have blamed the legislature for exacting political mistreatment on the restriction.
"The scandalous detainment of the sibling of previous President Alvaro Uribe obscures the environment, limits common freedoms and leaves the restriction without insurances," said Senator Paloma Valencia.
Santiago Uribe, a cows farmer, has not sought after a political vocation.
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