The takeover is newest chapter in standoff between the Arce authorities and supporters of ex-president Evo Morales.
An armed group in Bolivia has taken over a navy submit outdoors town of Cochabamba whereas holding some troopers captive, the armed forces mentioned in an announcement, ramping up tensions within the already restive Andean nation.
Cochabamba, situated in central Bolivia, is house to many supporters of former President Evo Morales.
Friday’s standoff over the navy submit, situated about 100 miles (160 km) east of Cochabamba, marks the most recent escalation in Bolivia’s more and more risky and sometimes violent politics.
The navy’s assertion described the armed group as “irregular”, noting it had additionally taken management of firearms and ammunition, and harassed that such actions amounted to treason.
Authorities urge group to disperse ‘instantly and peacefully’
It urged these liable for the takeover to “instantly and peacefully” abandon the ability.
“The lives of my instructors and troopers are in peril,” warned an unnamed navy official in a recording broadcast on native media.
Televised photos confirmed a row of uniformed troopers with their palms behind their backs, probably tied, surrounded by members of the armed group.
Earlier on Friday, some troopers stationed within the space in addition to their households fled their properties, as police stations shut down to forestall additional confrontations.
After police and navy items sought to take away a key freeway blockade that connects Cochabamba with town of Oruro, some protesters retaliated by launching dynamite at them from close by hills. Police then hurled tear fuel canisters at them.
The seizure of the navy outpost is seen as a response to efforts earlier this week by safety forces underneath the management of President Luis Arce to dislodge freeway blockades organised by supporters of Morales since mid-October.
The 2 leftist leaders, each with roots in Bolivia’s ruling socialist get together, have gone from shut allies to bitter rivals in current months as they jockey for place forward of subsequent 12 months’s presidential election.
In an tackle to the nation on Wednesday, Arce referred to as for an finish to the blockades, estimating that the disruptions to key transport routes have already value the impoverished South American nation’s economic system over $1.7bn.