https://x.com/i/status/2013009361698762758
They also removed Russia TV, the bolivian equivalent of Russia Today
If you haven't followed what happened in Bolivia recently : Evo Morales Ayma was ousted in 2019 under false western-backed accusations of cheating.
Instead of a civil war, his political party was allowed to present a candidate a year later(, a welcome surprise), which they won at the first round(, another welcomed surprise).
Evo Morales was forbidden to participate, so Luis Arce, his ex-economy minister, was elected in his stead but, for unknown reasons, he started acting against him afterwards, even attempting to murder Evo, perhaps because of foreign threats if he ever allowed Evo to be re-elected, or perhaps because he's been secretly a traitor for more than a decade, or for some other reasons.
Evo Morales continued to protest and Luis Arce ended up so low in the surveys that he didn't attempt to represent himself, despite continuing to forbid Evo Morales Ayma to participate, and Rodrigo Paz was elected last November. For the first time since 2005, bolivians hadn't elected a member of the MAS.
Rodrigo Paz is inversing the direction the country took, you may have heard of the massive protestations following the Supreme Decree 5503 last December, which changed many things and was abrogated a week ago.
However, he promulgated a few days later the Supreme Decree 5516 which "only" kept 31 articles out of the 121 ones, and i haven't checked exactly what it is.
(I saw suspicions of letting the bolivian raw materials be robbed by foreign companies, and neoliberal measures, among carrots such as an increase of the minimal wage, as i said i haven't given a serious look)
Here's Evo Morales twitter's account : https://x.com/evoespueblo
I found that example of Rodrigo Paz's policy interesting : he made union contributions voluntary(, they were mandatory until now), accusing syndicate leaders of misusing millions in forced dues

E.Morales also recently reminded us of the current persecution of the ex-vice-president of Ecuador, Jorge Glas.
What Lenín Moreno did to Rafael Correa and ecuadorians is another argument in favor of legalizing citizen-initiated recall elections.
(As for the argument that citizen-initiated recall elections would lead to presidents/'the executive branch' not daring to take difficult decisions, my answer is that it'd only force them to convice a majority of their population before acting, changing their way of governing by more dialogues/exchanges, and eventually referendums, e.g. 3 per year with ten items each. Just saying that taking decisions against the popular will or with its ignorance isn't the best/only way.
Of course, freedom of expression and a real pluralism would be required, as well as financing medias through democratic media vouchers, and by forbiding them to be bought by the ruling/capitalist/bourgeois/rentier/exploitative class/interests, being only owned by their journalists and eventually their readers)