Bolivia's leader: General accused of leading failed coup wanted to be president
Bolivia's President Luis Arce speaks during an interview at the government palace, in La Paz, Bolivia, June 28, 2024, two days after army troops stormed the palace in what Arce called a coup attempt.
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Bolivian President Luis Arce
said Friday a former general planned to "take over" the government
and become president in a failed coup, and he denied that the Andean nation was
in an economic crisis.
In an interview with The Associated Press, the embattled
leader denied once again that Wednesday's attack on the government palace was a
"self-coup" designed to garner him political points.
"I didn't escape. I stayed to defend democracy,"
Arce said.
Arce washed his hands of claims by relatives of the 21 people
detained by the government that they were innocent of attempting a coup and had
been tricked by ex-Gen. Juan Jose Zúñiga.
"It's a problem of those who were involved, it's not the
government's problem," Arce told AP.
Arce said also his government has been "politically
attacked" by his one-time ally turned rival, former President Evo Morales,
saying the infighting has snarled legislative activities and hamstrung his
government confronting economic problems.
Despite that, he said, Bolivia's economy is growing and his administration is working to "diversify" means of producing, investing in things like lithium and industrializing.
Bolivia has the largest
reserves of lithium — a metal known as "white gold" and considered
essential in the green transition — in the world that has gone largely
untapped, in part due to government policy.
Arce said the government "has taken action" to
address intermittent gasoline and dollar shortages and other hurdles ailing the
South American nation's economy.
"Bolivia has an economy that's growing. An economy in
crisis doesn't grow," he said.
He said it was "completely normal" for Bolivians to
run to stockpile food in supermarkets and make a run on ATMs upon seeing an
emerging coup in the capital, instead of following his call to take to the
streets in support of the government.
He said Bolivians were traumatized by the political turmoil
in 2019 that led Morales to resign as president and flee and also caused 37
deaths.
"Where there is a political situation, this rupture, a
coup d'état, of course people will be scared that there won't be food … so
they'll go get money to go stock up," Arce said.
He added that the government was investigating if the attack was organized by the country's political opposition.
That same day, Arce's governmental minister, Eduardo del Castillo, said the government claimed that there were "snipers who did not arrive in time to the Murillo square" where the coup was staged.


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