Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Vigilante justice goes viral on Peru's streets as residents post Facebook videos of how they're taking matters into their own hands

Justice: The 'Chapa Tu Choro' - meaning Catch your thief - movement, which was launched on Facebook, has inspired hundreds of citizens in Peru to take the law into their own hands

A Facebook campaign to dish out vigilante justice in Peru has gone viral - after hundreds of people started posting pictures and videos of themselves catching and punishing petty criminals.

More and more fed-up Peruvians are taking the law into their own hands and recording their often humiliating acts of retribution on their cameras or mobile phones.


The 'Catch Your Thief' movement took off after one neighbourhood decided to stop calling the police after a crime, warning they would 'lynch' the culprits instead.

Social media users quickly began posting their own home-made footage showing alleged thieves and pickpockets receiving their comeuppance, often at the hands of a baying mob of revenge-seekers.
 Punishment: Some vigilantes have been surprisingly creative in their methods of doling out the so-called justice, making their victims stand on the hills of biting ants, or eat raw chili peppers
Punishments range from being stripped naked and whipped in public and being forced to perform tough military exercises to even being force-fed raw chili peppers. 
One video shows a woman undressed and being walked through a busy street, with a banner around her neck reading 'I'm a thief'.

Another shows two whimpering alleged pickpockets being forced to stand on anthills until they beg for mercy as the insects bite their legs, feet and private parts. 


Terrified: Hundreds of videos and photos have been posted online, as vigilante justice has gone viral in Peru
The vigilantes claim the public acts of retribution are the best way of deterring would-be muggers or burglars, alleging that people have lost faith in the police to reduce crime.

But others warn that the craze has got out of hand and encourages criminal violence against the alleged offenders, without chance of a trial.

Over 100 similar Facebook pages have appeared in recent months, many with more brutal names, such as 'Catch your thief and leave him paralysed', 'Catch your thief and cut off his hands' and 'Catch your thief and castrate him'.

Violent: But the trend has worrying implications, as people accused of petty crimes are being often savagely beaten in front of baying crowds with no trial
Violent: But the trend has worrying implications, as people accused of petty crimes are being often savagely beaten in front of baying crowds with no trial

Publicity: In some neighbourhoods, well-organised groups of vigilantes - known as 'rondas urbanas' - have formed which patrol the streets, dishing out punishments on alleged troublemakers - including adulterous spouses - before posting the videos onto YouTube

Looming disaster: Earlier this month, the dangers of ordinary people meting out on-the-spot justice were apparent when a mob almost lynched an innocent man who they mistakenly accused of robbing a truck in the northern district of Cajamarca
Looming disaster: Earlier this month, the dangers of ordinary people meting out on-the-spot justice were apparent when a mob almost lynched an innocent man who they mistakenly accused of robbing a truck in the northern district of Cajamarca

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