Bolivia's defence minister Salinas resigns after weeks of mass protests


A police officer runs in front of demonstrators during a march calling for the resignation of Bolivian President Rodrigo Paz, as the country’s economic and fuel crisis worsens due to a shortage of U.S. dollars and declining domestic energy production, in La Paz, Bolivia, May 25, 2026. REUTERS/Claudia Morales

LA PAZ, June ⁠2 (Reuters) - Bolivian defence minister Marcelo Salinas ⁠resigned on Tuesday, a ministry source told ‌Reuters, following weeks of social unrest and mass protests which have blocked streets in major cities over ​the last month.

A second government ⁠source said Ernesto Justiniano ⁠has been tapped to replace Salinas.

Anti-government protests led ⁠by ‌labor unions and groups loyal to former leftist President Evo Morales, ⁠have strangled supply chains and demanded the ​resignation of ‌centrist President Rodrigo Paz, who assumed ⁠office in ​November 2025 putting an end to almost two decades of leftist rule.

Last week Paz took ⁠steps towards declaring a state ​of emergency that could send troops into the streets to restore calm.

Protesters want the new government ⁠to roll back austerity measures and address rising living costs.

The conflict began with a workers' strike in May that escalated into ​highway blockades that cut off ⁠access to the neighboring cities of La ​Paz and El Alto, which ‌are home to some ​2 million people.

(Reporting by Monica Machicao, Writing Iñigo Alexander, Editing by Natalia Siniawski)

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