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Bolivia dismisses Colombian ambassador as tensions heighten

By Thomson Reuters May 20, 2026 | 8:42 AM

By Daniel Ramos

LA PAZ, May 20 (Reuters) – Bolivia’s government asked Colombia’s ambassador to leave the country, citing sovereignty concerns and interference in internal ​affairs, the foreign ministry said in a ‌statement on Wednesday, as diplomatic tensions escalate over ongoing anti-government protests.

The move follows comments by Colombian President Gustavo Petro on May 17 describing the latest unrest as a “popular insurrection,” in ‌remarks ​on X.

“If they expel the ⁠ambassador simply for proposing ⁠dialogue and mediation, it means we’re sliding toward extremism that could lead to a very difficult situation for the Bolivian people,” Petro told local ​radio Caracol about Bolivia’s diplomatic measure.

International concern has been mounting over widening unrest in Bolivia, with ⁠banks closing branches in La ⁠Paz and roadblocks disrupting supplies, as ​unions, miners and rural groups demand economic relief and ​some call for President Rodrigo Paz’s resignation.

Petro also ‌reiterated that Colombia is willing to serve as a mediator to facilitate an internal dialogue among the conflicting factions in Bolivia.

U.S. Deputy Secretary of State ⁠Christopher Landau on Tuesday said he spoke with President Paz and warned that those defeated in last year’s election ⁠were trying to ‌remove him from power. The European ⁠Union and several European embassies, meanwhile, ​have ‌called for dialogue and peaceful demonstrations.

Bolivia’s foreign ​ministry said ⁠the decision was in line with international law and does not represent a break in diplomatic ties with Colombia.

(Reporting by Daniel Ramos and Lucinda Elliott; Additional reporting by Luis Jaime Acosta in Bogota; Writing ​by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez;)