Calm has returned to Bolivia’s capital after troops led by a top general stormed the presidential palace, then quickly retreated.
Bolivians chanting in support of the president rallied outside his palace on Thursday, denouncing the abortive coup attempt.
The tumultuous scenes threatened to pitch the long-troubled South American democracy into chaos.
The nation of 12 million watched in shock and bewilderment on Wednesday as Bolivian military forces appeared to turn on the government of President Luis Arce, seizing control of the capital’s main square with armoured personnel carriers, crashing a tank into the palace and unleashing tear gas on protesters who flooded the streets.
The country’s army chief, General Juan Jose Zuniga, addressed a scrum of TV reporters from the palace, vowing to “restore democracy”, replace the cabinet and free political prisoners.
Mr Arce refused to relent and named a new army commander, who immediately ordered troops to stand down, ending the rebellion after just three chaotic and head-snapping hours.
Hundreds of Mr Arce’s supporters rushed to the square outside the palace, waving Bolivian flags, singing the national anthem and cheering.
“Here we are, firm, in the presidential palace, to confront any coup attempt,” Mr Arce said after facing down General Zuniga, calling on Bolivians to mobilise in defence of democracy.
“Their goal was to overturn the democratically elected authority,” government minister Eduardo del Castillo told journalists in announcing the arrests of Gen Zuniga along with an alleged co-conspirator, former navy Vice Admiral Juan Arnez Salvador.
The short-lived rebellion followed months of mounting tensions between Mr Arce and his one-time ally, former president Evo Morales.
Bolivia’s first indigenous president, Mr Morales remains a towering figure in national politics years after mass protests that prompted him to resign and flee in 2019 – an ousting his supporters view as a coup.
Since returning from exile, Mr Morales has staged a dramatic political comeback.
Threatening to challenge Mr Arce in 2025 primaries, Mr Morales has sparked an unprecedented rift in their ruling socialist party. The feud has paralysed efforts to resolve a spiralling economic crisis, with the country’s foreign currency reserves diminishing and its natural gas exports plummeting.
Flanked by the newly appointed military chiefs late Wednesday, defence minister Edmundo Novillo sought to reassure the rattled public and shed light on what had happened.
The turmoil began earlier this week, Mr Novillo said, when Mr Arce dismissed Gen Zuniga in a private meeting on Tuesday over the army chief’s threats to arrest Mr Morales if he proceeded with his presidential bid in 2025. In their meeting, Mr Novillo said that Gen Zuniga gave officials no indication he was preparing to seize power.
“He admitted that he had committed some excesses,” Mr Novillo said of Gen Zuniga. “We said goodbye in the most friendly way, with hugs. Zuniga said that he would always be at the side of the president.”
The frantic palace takeover began hours later. Tailed by armoured vehicles and supporters, Gen Zuniga burst into government headquarters and declared that he was sick of political infighting.
“The armed forces intend to restore the democracy,” he said.
Former interim president Jeanine Anez, detained for her role in Mr Morales’ 2019 ousting, said that soldiers sought to “destroy the constitutional order” but appealed to both Mr Arce and Mr Morales not to run in the 2025 elections.
The mutiny by a lifelong member of the military with a low political profile stirred confusion. Just before his arrest, Gen Zuniga claimed that President Arce himself had asked the general to storm the palace in a ploy to boost the embattled leader’s popularity.
“The president told me: ‘The situation is very screwed up, very critical. It is necessary to prepare something to raise my popularity’,” Gen Zuniga quoted the Bolivian leader as saying.
Justice minister Ivan Lima denied Gen Zuniga’s claims, insisting the general was lying to justify his actions. Prosecutors will seek the maximum sentence of 15 to 20 years in prison for Gen Zuniga on charges of “attacking the constitution”, he said.
Analysts said that, more than anything, Wednesday’s events underscored the weakness of Bolivia’s democratic institutions.
“This grants control to the military and erodes democracy and is an important signpost that the problems of the 2019 coup have not been addressed,” said Kathryn Ledebur, director of the Andean Information Network, a Bolivia-based research group. “Bolivia’s democracy remains very fragile, and definitely a great deal more fragile today than it was yesterday.”
Later on Thursday the government announced that 17 people in total had been arrested.