Colombia and Bolivia Expel Diplomats as Petro-Paz Feud Erupts
Latin America · Diplomacy
Key Facts
—The Colombia Bolivia diplomatic crisis turned tit-for-tat: Bolivia declared Colombian ambassador Elizabeth García Carrillo persona non grata, and Colombia responded by ending the functions of Bolivia’s charge d’affaires, Ariel Percy Molina Pimentel.
—The trigger: Colombian President Gustavo Petro called Bolivia’s unrest a “popular insurrection” and a response to “geopolitical arrogance,” which La Paz condemned as interference in its internal affairs.
—Not a full break: both governments stressed the measures do not amount to a rupture of relations, though ties are now at their lowest level in years.
—Economic backdrop: Bolivia’s annual inflation hit 14.18% through April after closing 2025 at 20.4%, and forecasters see the economy shrinking up to 3.3% in 2026 after a 1.58% contraction last year.
—Three weeks of unrest: roadblocks and strikes demanding President Rodrigo Paz’s resignation have left more than 120 people detained and choked fuel and food supplies in La Paz and El Alto.
—Outside powers weigh in: the United States has backed Paz and warned against any “overthrow,” while the European Union urged calm and dialogue.
A war of words between two presidents has hardened into a diplomatic rupture in all but name. As Bolivia burns through its worst crisis in four decades, Colombia’s leftist government and La Paz’s centre-right administration have expelled each other’s envoys within hours.
What sparked the Colombia Bolivia diplomatic crisis?
The Rio Times, the Latin American financial news outlet, reports that the Colombia Bolivia diplomatic crisis erupted after President Gustavo Petro publicly characterised the unrest gripping Bolivia as a “popular insurrection” and a “response to geopolitical arrogance.” Speaking over the weekend, the Colombian leader also signalled sympathy for former president Evo Morales, who is wanted by Bolivian justice and has thrown his weight behind the protests.
La Paz read the comments as meddling in a sovereign matter. Bolivian Foreign Minister Fernando Aramayo confirmed that the government had declared Colombian ambassador Elizabeth García Carrillo persona non grata, citing what he called Petro’s “insistent public statements.” Bolivia’s foreign ministry added that it rejected any external framing that would “distort the nature of current events” or deepen confrontation among Bolivians.
How did Colombia respond to the expulsion?
Colombia’s foreign ministry announced hours later that it had ended the functions of Ariel Percy Molina Pimentel, the official heading Bolivia’s embassy office in Bogota, explicitly invoking the principle of diplomatic reciprocity and the relevant international treaties. The statement ordered his immediate departure and brought both countries’ representation to its lowest level in years.
Bogota rejected the accusation of interference outright. The ministry said no member of the national government had sought to involve itself in Bolivia’s internal affairs, and it reaffirmed its commitment to sovereign equality, non-intervention and the peaceful settlement of disputes. Petro, for his part, offered to act as a mediator to find “peaceful formulas” out of the crisis, an offer La Paz has not taken up.
Why is Bolivia in turmoil?
President Rodrigo Paz, a centre-right Christian Democrat who took office in November 2025 after nearly two decades of leftist rule, inherited an economy with depleted dollar reserves, fuel shortages and the worst macroeconomic position in 40 years. His decision to end long-standing fuel subsidies and tighten spending triggered protests that have since escalated into nationwide strikes and roadblocks demanding his resignation.
The trade-union confederation has pressed for a 20% wage increase and a halt to any privatisation of struggling state firms. Annual inflation reached 14.18% through April, the government has acknowledged a roughly $300 million shortfall to normalise fuel supply at about $63 million a week, and clashes between police and demonstrators have left more than 120 people detained across La Paz and El Alto.
What are the regional and market stakes?
The clash maps onto a broader Andean realignment, with Petro’s outgoing leftist government on one side and a wave of centre-right administrations on the other. The United States has voiced support for Paz and warned it would not tolerate an “overthrow,” while the European Union and several member states urged calm after the violence and looting of recent days.
For investors, the immediate market impact has been muted, in part because Bolivian sovereign bonds are thinly traded. The premium investors demand to hold Bolivian debt over comparable US Treasuries actually fell in May to its lowest level since at least 2020, according to financial-data provider LSEG, even as the political risk mounted. The bigger question is whether the standoff hardens into a lasting Bogota-La Paz freeze that complicates regional trade and diplomacy.
What should investors and analysts watch next?
- Paz’s survival: calls for his resignation and a planned cabinet reshuffle will determine whether the government can regain control of the streets.
- Fuel supply: closing the roughly $300 million import gap is the single most direct lever for easing the shortages driving the protests.
- Diplomatic escalation: watch whether either side moves from expelling envoys to a formal break in relations, which neither has declared so far.
- Regional alignment: how Washington, Brasilia and other capitals position themselves will shape whether Bolivia’s crisis stays domestic or becomes a regional flashpoint.
- Lithium and reserves: Bolivia’s vast lithium resources mean prolonged instability carries longer-term stakes for global battery supply chains.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Colombia Bolivia diplomatic crisis about?
It is a tit-for-tat expulsion of diplomats after Bolivia accused Colombian President Gustavo Petro of interfering in its internal affairs by describing the country’s protests as a “popular insurrection.”
Did Colombia and Bolivia break off relations?
No. Both governments stressed that expelling each other’s envoys does not amount to a full rupture of diplomatic relations, though ties are now at their lowest level in years.
Who is Rodrigo Paz?
He is Bolivia’s centre-right president, in office since November 2025 after ending nearly 20 years of leftist government. His austerity measures, including ending fuel subsidies, set off the current wave of protests.
How bad is Bolivia’s economy?
Annual inflation reached 14.18% through April after closing 2025 at 20.4%, and multilateral forecasters expect the economy to contract by as much as 3.3% in 2026, following a 1.58% decline in 2025.
How have markets reacted?
The reaction has been limited so far, partly because Bolivian sovereign bonds trade thinly. The risk premium on Bolivian debt actually fell in May to its lowest since at least 2020, even as political tensions rose.
Connected Coverage
The diplomatic rift is the latest turn in a deepening emergency we have tracked closely, from deadly protests laying siege to La Paz to banks shutting their doors as the strike entered a third week. For the security dimension, see how the government deployed 3,500 troops to clear the roadblocks choking the capital.
Reported by Sofia Gabriela Martinez for The Rio Times — Latin American financial news. Filed May 20, 2026 — 22:30 BRT.
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