Two Bolivian army leaders have been arrested after soldiers and tanks on Wednesday took up position in front of government buildings in what Bolivian President Luis Arce called an attempted coup.
The troops and tanks entered Plaza Murillo, a square where the presidency and the Bolivian Congress are situated, in the afternoon.
One of the tanks tried to break down a metal door of the presidential palace.
Photo: EPA-EFE
Surrounded by soldiers and eight tanks, the now-dismissed army chief, general Juan Jose Zuniga, said that the “armed forces intend to restructure democracy, to make it a true democracy and not one run by the same few people for 30, 40 years.”
Reporters saw soldiers and tanks pulling back from the square shortly afterward.
The uprising lasted about five hours.
Zuniga was captured and forced into a police car as he addressed reporters outside a military barracks later on Wednesday, footage on state television showed.
“General, you are under arrest,” Bolivian Deputy Minister of the Interior Jhonny Aguilera told Zuniga.
A second senior officer, Juan Arnez Salvador, who was head of the Bolivian navy, was also arrested.
Salvador’s arrest was announced by Bolivian Minister of the Interior Eduardo del Castillo, who said that Zuniga and the navy chief are “two military coup leaders who tried to destroy democracy and the institutionality of our country and failed.”
Speaking from a balcony of the government palace, Arce told hundreds of supporters that “no one can take away the democracy we have won.”
Before he was arrested, Zuniga told reporters that the president had told him to stage an uprising to trigger a crackdown that would make him look strong and boost his sagging approval rating.
At a meeting on Sunday, Zuniga had asked Arce: “So we bring out armored vehicles?” the general said.
He said the president answered: “Bring them out.”
Arce’s instructions were to “stage something to raise his popularity,” Zuniga said.
Tropical Storm Usagi strengthened to a typhoon yesterday morning and remains on track to brush past southeastern Taiwan from tomorrow to Sunday, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday. As of 2pm yesterday, the storm was approximately 950km east-southeast of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), Taiwan proper’s southernmost point, the CWA said. It is expected to enter the Bashi Channel and then turn north, moving into waters southeast of Taiwan, it said. The agency said it could issue a sea warning in the early hours of today and a land warning in the afternoon. As of 2pm yesterday, the storm was moving at
DISCONTENT: The CCP finds positive content about the lives of the Chinese living in Taiwan threatening, as such video could upset people in China, an expert said Chinese spouses of Taiwanese who make videos about their lives in Taiwan have been facing online threats from people in China, a source said yesterday. Some young Chinese spouses of Taiwanese make videos about their lives in Taiwan, often speaking favorably about their living conditions in the nation compared with those in China, the source said. However, the videos have caught the attention of Chinese officials, causing the spouses to come under attack by Beijing’s cyberarmy, they said. “People have been messing with the YouTube channels of these Chinese spouses and have been harassing their family members back in China,”
The Central Weather Administration (CWA) yesterday said there are four weather systems in the western Pacific, with one likely to strengthen into a tropical storm and pose a threat to Taiwan. The nascent tropical storm would be named Usagi and would be the fourth storm in the western Pacific at the moment, along with Typhoon Yinxing and tropical storms Toraji and Manyi, the CWA said. It would be the first time that four tropical cyclones exist simultaneously in November, it added. Records from the meteorology agency showed that three tropical cyclones existed concurrently in January in 1968, 1991 and 1992.
GEOPOLITICAL CONCERNS: Foreign companies such as Nissan, Volkswagen and Konica Minolta have pulled back their operations in China this year Foreign companies pulled more money from China last quarter, a sign that some investors are still pessimistic even as Beijing rolls out stimulus measures aimed at stabilizing growth. China’s direct investment liabilities in its balance of payments dropped US$8.1 billion in the third quarter, data released by the Chinese State Administration of Foreign Exchange showed on Friday. The gauge, which measures foreign direct investment (FDI) in China, was down almost US$13 billion for the first nine months of the year. Foreign investment into China has slumped in the past three years after hitting a record in 2021, a casualty of geopolitical tensions,