South American leaders told Bolivia's rebel governors to cease violent protests and strongly backed leftist president Evo Morales, who left an emergency summit in Chile and headed home today for talks with his opponents.
At least 16 people died last week in impoverished Bolivia as Mr Morales' opponents clashed with his supporters, blocked highways, sabotaged natural gas pipelines and sacked government buildings.
Mr Morales is popular but his push for deep socialist reforms has met with violent resistance from movements led by rightist governors in Bolivia's eastern lowlands. He accused the opposition of planning to topple him.
"We condemn and reject any attempt at a civilian coup or rupture of institutional order. We will not recognize any situation (leadership) that comes from that sort of action," Argentine president Cristina Fernandez said at the end of Monday's summit of nine South American presidents in Santiago.
The leaders at the summit said the rightist governors, who want more of Bolivia's energy revenue for their provinces and more autonomy, must end occupations of dozens of central government buildings as a condition for talks.
While the summit took place in Chile, Bolivian vice president Alvaro Garcia was holding preliminary talks in La Paz with one of the governors, Mario Cossio, of Tarija.
Mr Cossio represents a group of four eastern Bolivia governors who vehemently oppose Mr Morales, Bolivia's first indigenous president. Talks are expected to continue today and perhaps even turn into formal negotiations with all governors.
Reuters