World
Bolivian minister's convoy ambushed while overseeing roadblock clearance
May 24, 2026 International Source: BBC World
Security forces were met by resistance while attempting to clear highway barriers, amid unrest over the government's economic policies.
Bolivian minister's convoy ambushed while overseeing roadblock clearance
Copyright current_year BBC. All rights reserved. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.
Copyright current_year BBC. All rights reserved. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Read about our approach to external linking.
Riot police walk along a road lined with trucks held up by a roadblock in Bolivia
The convoy of Bolivia's public works minister was ambushed by protesters and briefly disappeared while overseeing the clearing of roadblocks on Saturday.
Mauricio Zamora's vehicle was intercepted in the town of Copata on Saturday afternoon and became separated from the group, local media reported. He was later located and is now safe.
He had been in command of an operation to clear barriers set up by anti-government protesters aimed at slowing the flow of goods into the administrative capital, La Paz, and nearby El Alto.
The mission to create so-called "humanitarian corridors" was met by renewed violence from demonstrators, with some convoys reportedly attacked with stones and dynamite.
Marches, protests and roadblocks by trade unions and supporters of left-wing former President Evo Morales have intensified this week, with clashes with security forces in La Paz.
The demonstrators are hoping to put pressure on Bolivia's centre-right President Rodrigo Paz to resign just six months after taking office over his government's austerity measures, with his alignment with the US another divisive issue.
Bolivia's police and military were dispatched from major cities in the early hours of Saturday morning to clear the roadblocks, deploying bulldozers to clear rocks and concrete pillars, aiming to ease the flow of food and medicine into the capital.
But in several places, clashes with protesters broke out and roadblocks were re-established.
Zamora's convoy had been travelling through Copata, south of La Paz, when residents began pelting it with stones and dynamite, local media reported.
His vehicle became separated from the others as they retreated but was able to take a dirt road, according to Agencia Noticias Fides (ANF). Here, though, it suffered a second ambush before eventually being able to reunite with the convoy.
Elsewhere, protesters looted and burnt down a customs post in Achicha Arriba, on the highway into El Alto, after police used tear gas to attempt to disperse protesters there.
Aerial view shows demonstrators blocking a road during a protest against the government in El Alto
Near Caracollo, north of Oruro, a convoy was attacked with explosives. Demonstrators burnt a military truck and looted a police station, while a minibus was burnt on the La Paz-Oruro highway, according to daily newspaper La Razon.
The government denied reports - repeated by Morales - that a person had been killed in the town of Vilaque, on the same highway. Several outlets reported journalists covering the operation coming under attack.
Paz was elected on a promise to end Bolivia's worst economic crisis in decades.
But his decision to scrap long-standing fuel subsidies amid shortages and inflation has raised living costs and enraged a sizeable portion of the population.
Morales - who is currently being protected by supporters while facing criminal allegations of having a relationship with a minor while president - has supported the protests, having long harboured opposition to US involvement in Latin America. Paz's government accuses him of instigating the unrest.
The centre-right leader said he was exploring every avenue of dialogue with the demonstrators, but told Argentine news outlet Todo Noticias on Saturday: "Everything has a limit."
A handful of protestors run across the road with smoke rising in the background
Anti-government demonstrators and police clash in Bolivia
Rodrigo Paz Pereira, with his fist in the air
Bolivia elects centrist Rodrigo Paz, ending decades of socialist rule
The investigation stems from when Luis Arce was minister of economy under then-president Evo Morales.
Maximiliano Dávila is accused of facilitating cocaine smuggling to the United States.
The move comes after weeks of clashes between security forces and supporters of ex-President Evo Morales.
Protesters have been calling for the president to resign after weeks-long unrest.
Alvaro Mendoza Sillerico, 32, had been in the Category B jail for more than three years.
Police fire tear gas to disperse crowds allegedly trying to take banknotes from the crash site.
Rodrigo Paz's win shows Bolivians want change, but he faces economic challenges after almost 20 years of socialist rule.
Felipe Cáceres is the latest counternarcotics official to be detained over an alleged drugs offence.