Berliner Boersenzeitung - Bolivia's president demands end to roadblocks

EUR -
AED 3.985343
AFN 72.699249
ALL 98.302618
AMD 419.137871
ANG 1.951872
AOA 989.561394
ARS 1072.839131
AUD 1.650561
AWG 1.955795
AZN 1.844044
BAM 1.956875
BBD 2.186721
BDT 129.423451
BGN 1.954544
BHD 0.408996
BIF 3146.169549
BMD 1.085046
BND 1.433561
BOB 7.484248
BRL 6.254315
BSD 1.08298
BTN 91.069484
BWP 14.47895
BYN 3.544311
BYR 21266.897507
BZD 2.183009
CAD 1.510064
CDF 3155.31323
CHF 0.939764
CLF 0.037823
CLP 1043.640396
CNY 7.727589
CNH 7.724761
COP 4789.695935
CRC 554.899577
CUC 1.085046
CUP 28.753713
CVE 110.327614
CZK 25.388771
DJF 192.857674
DKK 7.459451
DOP 65.215208
DZD 144.707447
EGP 52.885781
ERN 16.275687
ETB 132.779084
FJD 2.471715
FKP 0.830243
GBP 0.838084
GEL 2.978471
GGP 0.830243
GHS 17.654019
GIP 0.830243
GMD 75.411066
GNF 9340.042473
GTQ 8.370751
GYD 226.588595
HKD 8.432379
HNL 27.323751
HRK 7.474913
HTG 142.525633
HUF 408.126913
IDR 17039.179338
ILS 4.016655
IMP 0.830243
INR 91.232657
IQD 1418.805208
IRR 45672.288569
ISK 148.520775
JEP 0.830243
JMD 171.452563
JOD 0.769626
JPY 166.409115
KES 139.710098
KGS 93.09458
KHR 4397.333492
KMF 492.17323
KPW 976.540967
KRW 1497.77565
KWD 0.332664
KYD 0.902521
KZT 529.247923
LAK 23761.485249
LBP 96820.14766
LKR 317.320087
LRD 207.944181
LSL 19.061918
LTL 3.203858
LVL 0.656333
LYD 5.226798
MAD 10.676459
MDL 19.43503
MGA 4976.73269
MKD 61.539507
MMK 3524.186405
MNT 3686.985628
MOP 8.66962
MRU 43.061248
MUR 50.031342
MVR 16.655596
MWK 1877.931159
MXN 21.893617
MYR 4.751193
MZN 69.329654
NAD 19.06183
NGN 1781.362899
NIO 39.850964
NOK 11.904309
NPR 145.707664
NZD 1.815754
OMR 0.417758
PAB 1.083015
PEN 4.084418
PGK 4.339343
PHP 63.217483
PKR 300.85874
PLN 4.355184
PYG 8569.78459
QAR 3.949341
RON 4.975367
RSD 117.041697
RUB 105.275083
RWF 1473.795668
SAR 4.075187
SBD 9.023601
SCR 14.753916
SDG 652.658306
SEK 11.594653
SGD 1.435613
SHP 0.830243
SLE 24.576652
SLL 22752.864247
SOS 618.934148
SRD 37.289788
STD 22458.257178
SVC 9.476378
SYP 2726.210393
SZL 19.057201
THB 36.642212
TJS 11.52354
TMT 3.808511
TND 3.363409
TOP 2.541289
TRY 37.204159
TTD 7.349171
TWD 34.692711
TZS 2951.32462
UAH 44.688738
UGX 3969.252652
USD 1.085046
UYU 44.405611
UZS 13834.851631
VEF 3930635.380737
VES 46.1243
VND 27451.658516
VUV 128.818849
WST 3.039413
XAF 656.308301
XAG 0.032167
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.932391
XDR 0.814047
XOF 656.308301
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.614108
ZAR 19.17081
ZMK 9766.714583
ZMW 28.836099
ZWL 349.384302
  • RELX

    -1.0000

    46.91

    -2.13%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    12.23

    +0.16%

  • BCC

    2.7300

    134.37

    +2.03%

  • GSK

    -1.1600

    37.01

    -3.13%

  • RIO

    -0.6800

    65.9

    -1.03%

  • RBGPF

    -0.0800

    60.92

    -0.13%

  • NGG

    -0.0500

    65.07

    -0.08%

  • BP

    -0.3400

    29.02

    -1.17%

  • BTI

    -0.1000

    34.36

    -0.29%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.59

    +0.08%

  • BCE

    -0.2200

    32.24

    -0.68%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.05

    +0.54%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    24.83

    -0.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.22

    -0.42%

  • VOD

    0.1100

    9.39

    +1.17%

  • AZN

    -2.3900

    72.83

    -3.28%

Bolivia's president demands end to roadblocks
Bolivia's president demands end to roadblocks / Photo: AIZAR RALDES - AFP/File

Bolivia's president demands end to roadblocks

Bolivian President Luis Arce on Wednesday demanded an immediate end to more than two weeks of roadblocks set up by supporters of ex-president Evo Morales around the country.

Text size:

In an address to the nation, Arce said there could be "no dialogue" unless the roadblocks were lifted, saying the pressure tactics used by Morales's supporters to try to prevent his arrest on rape charges were strangling the economy.

He warned that if his appeal went unheeded the government "will exercise its constitutional powers to safeguard the interests of the Bolivian people."

Arce did not say whether he was considering using the military to clear the roads or declaring a state of emergency, as demanded by some Bolivians to end the unrest.

Morales said he interpreted the remarks as a threat.

"Instead of calling for dialogue to resolve the conflict (...) Arce launches threats against the mobilized people. Any act of violence will be his sole responsibility," he wrote on X.

Morales, who governed Bolivia from 2006 to 2019, is under investigation for rape, human trafficking and smuggling over his alleged relationship with a 15-year-old girl in 2015.

Bolivia's first Indigenous president claims the charges were trumped-up to try to prevent him returning to power.

His supporters have blocked roads around the country, particularly in his central political stronghold of Cochabamba, and clashed repeatedly with police who try to clear them.

Arce said 61 police officers and nine civilians had been injured in the clashes.

The protests have aggravated widespread shortages of fuel and basic goods and caused spiraling prices -- one of the protesters' key grievances -- to further rocket.

Arce estimated the cost of the roadblocks at over $1.7 billion dollars and said they were "having terrible effects on families" and were "strangling the economy, preventing the normal supply of fuel and increasing food prices."

The standoff between Morales and Arce escalated dramatically on Sunday after Morales accused state agents of trying to assassinate him while driving near Cochabamba.

A video posted on social media showed the pick-up truck in which he was travelling riddled with bullet holes and the driver with blood on his head.

The government says police fired on his vehicle after it ran a checkpoint and police came under gunfire from a vehicle in Morales's convoy.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)