LA PAZ, Bolivia — The death threats came rolling in shortly after Gimena Silva's husband was detained on accusations that he took part in a failed coup in Bolivia.
''They call us, they say that if we do anything, say anything, they're going to disappear us. They threaten not just us, but our children too,'' Silva said. ''They're anonymous calls and they say they will kill our kids.''
Now, Silva, a mother of three children, sits with her mother and brother crying at the doors of a jail, clinging to any news of her husband, Luis Domingo Balanza.
Balanza, a military major of more than 15 years, was among 21 people arrested after a group of military and armored vehicles attempted what the government has called a '' failed coup d'état.'' On Friday night, a Bolivian judge sent former Gen. Juan José Zuñiga, who led the failed coup, to a maximum security prison on preventative detention alongside two others accused of terrorism and armed uprising against the state.
Families of those detained were visibly confused and anxious in the jail where their loved ones were kept on Friday, saying they knew nothing of a plot in the lead-up to Wednesday's spectacle. Many families of those detained say their loved ones were simply ''following orders'' or told they were carrying out a ''military exercise.''
Bolivian President Luis Arce washed his hands of the families' claims that those detained were innocent or tricked in an interview Friday with The Associated Press.
''It's a problem of those who were involved, it's not the government's problem,'' Arce said.
Images from Bolivia shocked the world Wednesday as an armored car rammed into the government palace in La Paz, the country's seat of government, and military officers fled after Arce said his government was not backing down.