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Protests in Bolivia call for President Paz to resign over economic crisis

Thousands of demonstrators in La Paz and other cities called for the resignation of President Rodrigo Paz on Monday. Road blockades have restricted supplies of food, fuel and medicine to the capital.

Al Jazeera
1 source·May 19, 9:29 PM(9 days ago)·1m read
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Protests in Bolivia call for President Paz to resign over economic crisisfrance24.com
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Antigovernment protests have escalated across Bolivia, with thousands of people demanding the resignation of President Rodrigo Paz as road blockades leave the administrative capital, La Paz, short of food, fuel and medicine. On Monday, farmers, miners, teachers, public sector workers and Indigenous communities converged on the city after weeks of mobilisations over wage increases, economic instability and moves to privatise state-owned companies.

Bolivia is facing its worst economic crisis in 40 years, with year-on-year inflation reaching 14 percent in April, eroding purchasing power and deepening anger over rising living costs. Paz, who took office less than six months ago after two decades of largely socialist rule, has moved quickly to scrap longstanding fuel subsidies that officials say had drained Bolivia’s foreign currency reserves.

The decision has so far failed to stabilise fuel supplies and has instead intensified public anger over higher prices and shortages.

Tear gas blanketed central La Paz for hours as riot police confronted the demonstrators trying to reach the main square that houses key government buildings. Protesters hurled stones and small explosives in response. Authorities have not released an official injury toll, but the AFP news agency reported that at least two protesters were injured.

Images released by the government showed protesters entering an office and carrying away furniture, computers and other equipment. Local TV station Unitel reported more than 100 detentions nationwide. “We want him to resign because he’s incompetent.

Bolivia is going through a moment of chaos,” said 60-year-old farmer Ivan Alarcon, who travelled about 90km (60 miles) from Caquiaviri in western Bolivia to join the protests.

Key Facts

14 percent inflation
year-on-year rate reached in April
Over 100 detentions
reported nationwide by Unitel
Two protesters injured
according to AFP reporting
Road blockades
restricted food, fuel and medicine in La Paz

Story Timeline

3 events
  1. 19 May 2026

    Thousands of protesters marched in La Paz demanding President Paz resignation.

    1 sourceAl Jazeera
  2. 19 May 2026

    Riot police used tear gas against demonstrators in central La Paz.

    1 sourceAl Jazeera
  3. April 2026

    Year-on-year inflation reached 14 percent.

    1 sourceAl Jazeera

Potential Impact

  1. 01

    More than 100 people have been detained during the protests.

  2. 02

    Shortages of food, fuel and medicine have affected residents of La Paz.

  3. 03

    Fuel subsidy removal has contributed to higher prices and shortages.

Transparency Panel

Sources cross-referenced1
Confidence score65%
Synthesized bySubstrate AI
Word count268 words
PublishedMay 19, 2026, 9:29 PM
Bias signals removed1 across 1 outlet
Signal Breakdown
Framing 1

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