Bolivia

System structure · Decree 5566 (March 2026)
How Bolivia’s state media is governed
The 2026 reform consolidated executive control across the system
Unidad de Comunicación Estratégica del Estado
Decentralised entity under the Ministry of the Presidency · no board · director appointed by the president
Red Patria Nueva
SC · radio
Ahora El Pueblo
SC · newspaper
ABI
SC · news agency
RPO network
ISFM · station-level autonomy
Administered list also includes the Gaceta Oficial de Convocatorias (not mapped by SMM as a media outlet).
Handled separately in the same decree
Bolivia TV
SC · television. Not in the administered list — controlled via redefined ministerial board & general manager named by presidential supreme resolution
University broadcasters (RUBI)
ISFM · outside the decree entirely — attached to constitutionally autonomous public universities
Three State-Controlled outlets plus RPO are named under the new Unit. Bolivia TV is controlled separately in the same decree through its board and appointment rules. The university broadcasters sit outside the executive apparatus entirely. The reform consolidated executive control rather than loosening it.
Freedom of expression · Bolivia
Press-freedom environment
RSF World Press Freedom Index 2026
91/180
Global rank
“Difficult”
One of 14 Americas countries in the “difficult” or “very serious” bands
Overall score 54.25 · ▲ up 2 places from 93rd (54.09) in 2025 — essentially flat, no structural change
The five RSF indicators (0–100, higher = freer)
Security
74.4
Legal
62.2
Social
61.0
Political
37.4
Economic
36.3
RSF reports that attacks, threats, censorship and harassment by the government and pro-government forces constantly violate press freedom, with police attacks on journalists increasingly frequent and physical attacks intensifying since 2020, especially in rural areas. It notes the government controls many newspapers, that ownership of private media is highly concentrated — jeopardising pluralism — and that self-censorship stems from ties between media owners and the government. The weakest indicators are political and economic; there is still no public-media law guaranteeing independence from the executive.

Bolivia operates a compact but tightly held state-media system. Its core is a set of national outlets owned and run directly by the executive, a television channel, a radio network, a state newspaper and a news agency, supplemented by an Indigenous-community radio network and, at arm’s length, the broadcasters of the country’s autonomous public universities. State Media Monitor maps six entities or clusters in Bolivia: four directly controlled by the national government and classified State-Controlled (SC), and two state-funded but more independently managed cases classified Independent State-Funded and State-Managed (ISFM).

The defining development of the 2026 cycle is structural. Following the November 2025 change of government, in which Rodrigo Paz ended the long period of dominance by the Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) that began in 2006 (interrupted by the 2019-2020 interim government), the new administration reorganised the entire state-media apparatus. Supreme Decree 5566 of 2 March 2026 created the Unidad de Comunicación Estratégica del Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia, a decentralised entity under the Ministry of the Presidency, headed by an executive director appointed by the president and with no board, and gave it responsibility for government communication strategy, official digital communication, monitoring, and the administration of the state media. The decree brought Radio Illimani–Red Patria Nueva, Ahora El Pueblo, ABI and RPO into the new Unit’s administrative sphere, while separately tightening the executive appointment structure of Bolivia TV by redefining its ministerial board and providing that its general manager is appointed by presidential supreme resolution. Rather than loosening the executive’s hold, the reform consolidated it.

The state-controlled core

Four outlets form the government’s directly-run media system, all classified SC across every SMM cycle:

Bolivia TV: the state television channel (Empresa Estatal de Televisión “Bolivia TV,” Canal 7), the flagship of the state-media system, whose general manager is a government appointment.

Red Patria Nueva – Radio Illimani: the official state radio network, broadcasting nationally from origins dating to 1933.

Ahora El Pueblo: the state newspaper, the latest name in a lineage that ran from Cambio (2009) to Bolivia (2019) to its current title (2021). The government announced in November 2025 that its print edition would be discontinued and that it would move to digital-only distribution, but Bolivian reporting in early 2026 indicated the printed edition was still being published; its print/digital status is therefore best described as in flux.

Agencia Boliviana de Información (ABI): the official state news agency, which began operations in 1996; its operations were temporarily suspended during the November 2025 restructuring and resumed in 2026.

Radio Illimani–Red Patria Nueva, Ahora El Pueblo and ABI are named among the media administered by the new Unidad de Comunicación Estratégica; Bolivia TV’s executive control was tightened separately in the same decree. What unites them is not a political line but a structure: state ownership, executive-appointed leadership, heavy dependence on public funding, state advertising and/or official production contracts with limited independent commercial income, and the absence of any binding editorial-independence safeguard. Their coverage has historically realigned with changes of government (the interim administration, the MAS governments, and now the Paz administration) and early 2026 output and restructuring indicate continuing subordination to the incumbent executive, because their subordination is to the state apparatus rather than to any party.

The independent-leaning state media

Two entities are state-funded but managed at greater distance from the executive, and are classified ISFM:

Sistema Nacional de Radios de los Pueblos Originarios (RPO): a nationwide network of Indigenous-community radio stations broadcasting in Spanish and Indigenous languages. It is wholly state-funded and, since the 2026 decree, centrally administered within the state-communications unit, but it operates as a dispersed network of locally-run community stations without a documented pattern of central editorial control over individual stations. RPO is the closest of the Bolivian cases to the state-controlled boundary, and is held at ISFM as a flagged boundary case: the March 2026 reorganisation strengthens the state-management dimension, and if central administration were to translate into central editorial direction of the stations, the classification would move to SC.

Public-university broadcasters (RUBI network): Bolivia’s autonomous public universities operate their own television and radio stations, networked as the Red Universitaria Boliviana de Información. The two flagship channels are Televisión Universitaria UMSA (Canal 13, La Paz), owned by the Universidad Mayor de San Andrés, and Televisión Universitaria UAGRM (Canal 11, Santa Cruz), owned by the Gabriel René Moreno Autonomous University. They are treated as an ISFM cluster because they are attached to constitutionally autonomous public universities, which under Bolivia’s constitution administer their own resources and appointments while the state is obliged to subsidise them, rather than to the national executive. They are added to the SMM roster for 2026 as a state-media cluster, at the level of the network; individual station profiles have not been written.

Press-freedom environment

Bolivia sits in the “difficult” band of Reporters Without Borders’ 2026 World Press Freedom Index, ranked 91st of 180 with a score of 54.25. The European Union Election Observation Mission to the 2025 elections found that the state media operated under the government’s communication structures and devoted most of their coverage to the government and the president, and recommended a public-media law to guarantee pluralism and independence from the executive, a safeguard that does not currently exist. Bolivia has no comprehensive AI law in force as of mid-2026, though an AI-related bill was approved by the Senate in October 2025 and remained under consideration.

Overall assessment

Bolivia’s state-media system is small and heavily concentrated on the state-controlled side. Four of the six mapped entities are directly executive-run SC outlets; the two ISFM cases sit at the system’s edges — one (RPO) a boundary case pulled toward control by the 2026 reform, the other (the university broadcasters) genuinely autonomous in management despite public funding. The trajectory of the cycle is toward greater central consolidation, not less: the 2026 decree gathered the core outlets under a single presidentially-appointed body, and the absence of any statutory guarantee of editorial independence means the system’s character continues to depend on the government of the day rather than on durable institutional safeguards.

State Media Monitor · Country Overview
State Media in Bolivia
Six mapped entities or clusters · July 2026
5
STATE-CONTROLLED (SC)
Directly executive-run
2
INDEP. STATE-FUNDED & MANAGED (ISFM)
State-funded, autonomous mgmt
Bolivia TV
State television — Canal 7, flagship outlet
Red Patria Nueva – Radio Illimani
State radio network
Ahora El Pueblo
State newspaper State newspaper — print discontinued Nov 2025mdash; print/digital status in flux
Agencia Boliviana de Información (ABI)
State news agency
Sistema Nacional de Radios de los Pueblos Originarios (RPO)
Indigenous-community radio network — boundary case
Public-university broadcasters — RUBI networkADDED 2026
TVU UMSA (La Paz) TVU UMSA (La Paz) & TVU UAGRM (Santa Cruz) — proposed, reviewer to confirmamp; TVU UAGRM (Santa Cruz) TVU UMSA (La Paz) & TVU UAGRM (Santa Cruz) — proposed, reviewer to confirmmdash; constitutionally autonomous universities

Media profiles