The Bolivian president has pulled the trigger on a state of emergency. The move, announced late this evening, signals a regime scrambling for control. Sources on the ground describe a landscape of escalating protests, economic paralysis, and a government losing its grip.
The declaration grants sweeping powers: curfews, censorship, and the ability to deploy the military. It is the nuclear option. One opposition MP told me: "This is not strength. This is panic."
The trigger appears to be last week's general strike. Transport unions, miners, and indigenous groups have paralysed the capital. The economy is bleeding. Fuel shortages are spreading. The president's approval rating is in freefall.
But here is the political game. The emergency decree is a double-edged sword. It may crush the protests in the short term. It will also unite the opposition. And it hands a propaganda victory to the president's enemies. They will say: "See? He rules by fear, not consent."
Backchannel whispers suggest splits inside the cabinet. The defence minister is said to have opposed the move. The interior minister pushed for it. Classic playground politics. When the knives come out, they come out at night.
What happens next? The international community will watch. Condemnation statements are already drafted. The UN will call for restraint. The US will express concern. All theatre. The real question is whether the security forces stay loyal. That is the only currency that matters here.
For now, the president has bought time. But time for what? A political settlement? Or a crackdown that spirals into civil conflict? The next 48 hours are critical. I have covered enough crises to know: once the emergency is declared, the only way out is often worse than what came before.