Rival Bolivia coca growers protest in La Paz, disputed market burned

Coca farmers from Yungas region descend on capital La Paz, seizing a leaf market run by pro-government farmers and setting it on fire.

Anti and pro-government coca farmers clash outside the disputed leaf market in the Bolivian capital.
AP

Anti and pro-government coca farmers clash outside the disputed leaf market in the Bolivian capital.

Thousands of coca farmers have marched into the Bolivian capital of La Paz and set ablaze what they claimed was an illegal new market for the leaf.

The growers, who marched five days from the Yungas region north of La Paz, broke through police lines on Thursday and attacked with dynamite, firecrackers and Molotov cocktails. 

No one was seriously injured in the incident.

The market was established in October 2021 in addition to two existing wholesale coca markets chartered under Bolivian law in La Paz and Cochabamba. In those markets, coca quantities and buyers are regulated.

The country's politicised coca sector has been in disagreement over which market in La Paz is legal.

Agustin Mamani, one of the march's leaders, said the marchers numbered more than 10,000. 

No official crowd estimates were available.

READ MORE: Bolivia farmers clash with police over 'illegal' coca markets

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Anti-government coca farmers beat another coca grower who they say is a government supporter.

'Government is responsible'

Esar Apaza, the Indigenous leader of a group demanding the closure of the new coca market, blamed the government of President Luis Arce for allowing it to open.

"The government and its ministers are responsible for this," Apaza said.

The coca leaf has long been grown in the Andes for its nutritional and medicinal benefits, while also being the raw material for cocaine.

The coca growers said they would not return to their regions until the government resolves the conflict.

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