Bolivian President Arce Replaces Military High Command Three Days Before Elections - teleSUR English
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11 Articles
Bolivian President Arce Replaces Military High Command Three Days Before Elections - teleSUR English
On Sunday, Bolivians will elect president and lawmakers for the next five years amid a severe economic crisis. President Luis Arce replaced the top military leadership of the Bolivian Armed Forces on Thursday, three days before Sunday’s general elections. RELATED: President Arce Celebrates Brotherhood Ties Between Bolivia and Venezuela Arce swore in Gustavo Anibarro as interim commander of the Armed Forces; Sherman Sempertegui as chief of the Ar…
Renew Luis Arce the military leadership of Bolivia
Arce stressed that “today, more than ever, our Armed Forces must show that commitment to the people.”
The President of Bolivia, Luis Arce (MAS), appointed five new senior members of the Armed Forces on Thursday, reminding them of their “mission to preserve democracy and maintain the peace and governance of the State,” when only three days remain before the Andean country will hold presidential and legislative elections for the next five years. This, at a time when, for the first time in 20 years, the Bolivian right wing has serious options to re…
President Luis Arce held the new High Command of the Armed Forces on Thursday night and reminded them of his constitutional mandate with democracy and the mission of maintaining the peace and governance of the elected government at the polls, reports a cablde the official ABI agency.The Bolivian Navy in charge [...] The entry At the time of the presidential election, Bolivia appoints new heads of the FFAA was first published in INFOGATE.
Bolivian President Luis Arce on Thursday changed the entire military high command in Bolivia, three days before the presidential elections in which the right is emerging as the favorite after 20 years of socialist governments. The last time Arce renewed the military leadership was in October 2024, at a critical moment, when supporters of former President Evo Morales blocked national roads that put his administration in trouble for more than thre…
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