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As this chart shows, state participation in political violence has been minimal under Arce. Only two people have been killed in sociopolitical conflicts by security forces, a jailed official who died after mistreatment and a protester wounded by a less-lethal munition.
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Only one presidency saw less lethal violence by Bolivian security forces since 1982: Eduardo Rodríguez's eight-month interim government.
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Still, the overall death toll has averaged 11 per year, in the middle of the pack for Bolivian presidents under democracy.
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Still, four of the deaths took place in the context of partisan, left–right confrontations, a seeming reprise of the catastrophic stalemate of 2006-09 and the violence between the 2019 election and Evo Morales's resignation.
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All three of the deaths of state security forces came in instances where the Arce government intervened to stop violence between conflicting communities of its own supporters, in conflicts over coca union leadership in Apolo, over mining in Sorata and El Torno.

