Daily Security Brief

Bolivia

June 23, 2026Score 32
⬇ Bolivia dataset (CSV) — events, per-region risk, cyber & sources

Situation Summary

Bolivia remains a low-frequency event environment with no tracked discrete security incidents in the current reporting window. The composite threat score of 32 places the country outside the global top-tier risk tier, reflecting a relatively stable baseline in governance, civil order, and cross-border security. Sub-national risk mapping is currently unavailable; however, historical patterns indicate that labor disputes, transport-sector blockades, and localized protest activity concentrate in La Paz Department and key trade corridors. Near-term trajectory remains steady absent new triggering events.

Key Developments

No discrete security events have been verified in the last 24–48 hours (22–23 June 2026).

Due to limited access to real-time Bolivian news feeds, social media, and local authority statements for this specific window, GeoBit cannot responsibly attribute current incidents without cross-verification. Any reporting below this line would be speculative and unsuitable for duty-of-care decision-making.

To obtain actionable 24–48-hour event intelligence, corporate security teams should:

Highest-Risk Areas

Sub-national risk ranking data is presently unavailable. Historically, La Paz Department (capital region, El Alto, and main trade corridors) and Cochabamba Department (agricultural zones, transport hubs, and coca-growing regions) have registered the highest frequency of labor disputes, civic strikes, and roadway blockades. Risk concentration in these areas reflects labor union organizing, agricultural/commercial grievances, and transport-sector coordination. Security teams with personnel in these departments should maintain heightened situational awareness and pre-positioned contingency routes; teams in outlying regions (Santa Cruz, Potosí, Oruro) typically face lower operational friction.

How GeoBit Would Assist

Intel Sweep and multi-language X/Twitter & Telegram OSINT would enable continuous monitoring of Bolivian civil-unrest indicators, labor union announcements, and regional blockade activity in real time. AOI Monitoring & Early Warning on La Paz, El Alto, and major highway corridors (Ruta 9, Ruta 4) would trigger alerts when protest activity, vehicle density anomalies, or police deployments emerge. Routing & Network Analysis would support corporate teams in pre-computing alternative supply-chain and personnel-movement routes during anticipated strike windows or confirmed blockade events. Combined with Sentiment & Temporal Analysis of Spanish-language social feeds, these tools would provide 48–72-hour forward warning of escalating civil-order risk.

7-Day Outlook

No immediate escalation triggers are evident. Bolivia's civil-unrest cycle typically follows announcement phases (labor union calls for action) followed by 3–7 day mobilization periods; absent new triggering grievances (fuel shortages, wage disputes, electoral tension), the near-term baseline remains stable. Teams should monitor for cumulative labor announcements in late June and early July, as winter-season agricultural and transport disputes often cluster in Q3.

Previous Daily Briefs

A new Bolivia brief is written every day — each with its own risk map and downloadable CSV. Here's the last week; use the calendar to go further back.

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June 2026
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Automated by GeoBit AI from publicly reported events and open-source research. Context only; not a risk advisory. Recognized by Deloitte · NVIDIA Inception · Geospatial World Forum.

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