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A soldier in an armored vehicle is deployed outside the Quemado Palace at Plaza Murillo in La Paz on June 26, 2024.

A soldier in an armored vehicle is deployed outside the Quemado Palace at Plaza Murillo in La Paz on June 26, 2024. (Aizar Raldes/AFP via Getty Images/TNS)

(Tribune News Service) — Bolivia President Luis Arce late Wednesday swore in a new army commander general after troops led by his predecessor stormed the presidential palace Wednesday in an attempted coup.

Arce installed commander general Jose Wilson Sanchez to take over as the country’s new military chief, who promptly ordered the military to retreat and the troops appeared to be obeying. Wilson Sanchez takes the place of army general commander Juan Jose Zuniga who led the uprising, had entered the presidential palace but then exited shortly thereafter and left the plaza adjoining the palace.

By late afternoon in La Paz, however, there were myriad signs that the government was reasserting control. Arce walked through in the main square that was taken over by military, and greeted his own supporters before re-entering the palace.

Hours earlier, Bolivian troops led by Zuniga had stormed the presidential palace as socialist President Luis Arce denounced a coup attempt and called on his supporters to take to the streets to defend democracy.

Military personnel had already taken over the capital’s main square when they crashed a tank into the palace, then used tear gas to try to repel chanting crowds, according to images broadcast on local TV.

“We need for the Bolivian people to organize and mobilize against the coup d’etat and in favor of democracy,” Arce said in a nationwide address flanked by his cabinet. He said he was located at Casa Grande, an annex that is next door to the presidential palace that was stormed.

Arce said on social media earlier that some military units were conducting “irregular” operations. TV images showed general commander Zuniga entering the palace after the armored vehicle hit it. He then quickly left the building.

Zuniga was fired earlier this week after saying he would prevent former President Evo Morales from running again for the presidency, El Pais reported. Arce and Morales have a thorny relationship but used to be close political allies in the left-wing MAS party.

Arce’s socialist government, which was elected in 2020, has recently struggled with an economic crisis amid dwindling natural gas exports, a shortage of dollars and a currency peg that has effectively collapsed.

Bolivia is among the world’s most politically turbulent nations, having had nearly 200 coups and revolutions since it won independence from Spain two centuries ago. Morales was ousted by the army as recently as 2019 after a disputed election.

The country narrowly avoided a financial crisis in 2023 by passing a law to allow the central bank to sell about half of its gold reserves. Six months later, that had nearly all been spent: The bank had just 23.5 tons of gold left at the end of the year, and the law says this figure can’t drop below 22 tons.

Morales recently split with Arce as the two battled for control of the ruling socialist party. He also denounced the coup attempt.

The move by Bolivia’s military come just as Brazil’s Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and other leftist Latin American presidents sought to reunite Arce and Morales ahead of next year’s presidential elections in Bolivia, according to a Brazilian government official.

Brazil, however, didn’t see any indication that a coup was underway, a second official said. Both requested anonymity in discussing Lula’s strategy.

The Brazilian president had already announced plans to meet Arce in Santa Cruz de la Sierra in the beginning of July, right after a Mercosur summit that will take place in Paraguay.

Nations including Ecuador and Brazil said that democracy must be upheld in Bolivia. The secretary of the Organization of American States, Luis Almagro, said on X that he condemned the events.

“The army should subject itself to the civil powers legitimately elected,” he said.

U.S. National Security Council spokeswomen Adrienne Watson said that “the United States is closely monitoring the situation in Bolivia and urge calm and restraint.”

With assistance from Simone Iglesias and Jordan Fabian.

©2024 Miami Herald.

Visit at miamiherald.com.

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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