• gedaliyah@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    “Accused” by whom?

    Just before he was detained on Wednesday, the alleged plotter Zúñiga sowed seeds of doubt, telling journalists – without providing evidence…

    Burried in the EIGHTH paragraph, past the break. FML that should be in the headline, Guardian. Please do better.

  • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    [Bolivia] has seen about 190 coups, as well as military dictatorships and revolutions, since it gained independence in 1825.

    Jesus Christ. That country fucking loves coups.

    • rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      This coup looks like no other in Latin American history. Even the opposition parties denounced it, and there was virtually no division in the military

    • madsen@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Didn’t something similar happen in Turkey with Erdogan a few years back? Pretty sure he was accused of being behind it himself too; don’t know what the final verdict was though.

      I think it’s a pretty common accusation, just like when a politician is attacked, someone will invariably suggest that they staged it in order to get more support.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    2 days ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    It was the armoured vehicles circling the Plaza Murillo - the normally tranquil central square in historic downtown La Paz – that initially set Bolivians on edge on Wednesday afternoon.

    By 2.30pm, a small tank was repeatedly ramming the gates of the neoclassical building known as Palacio Quemado until troops forced their way in and, in an extraordinary scene, the coup leader – disgruntled former army chief Juan José Zuñiga – faced off against the president, Luis Arce.

    It lasted just three hours, during which time Arce rallied Bolivians to “mobilise” to defend democracy, apparently defused the mutiny in a one-on-one confrontation and appointed a new military command which ordered mutinous troops back to their barracks.

    Just before he was detained on Wednesday, the alleged plotter Zuñiga sowed seeds of doubt, telling journalists – without providing evidence – that Arce had ordered him to stage a sham coup in a bid to boost the president’s flagging popularity.

    In Arce’s defence, Deisy Choque, a legislator for the governing Movement Towards Socialism (MAS) party, warned that the coup might have been successful “had it not been for the position taken by the president, the ministers and Bolivian society as a whole in immediately repudiating these actions”.

    Amid plummeting gas exports and dwindling foreign reserves, there are growing protests over rising food prices and the scarcity of fuel and US dollars, as well as deep divisions within his political party.


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