Forced to stand on anthills, made to eat raw chili peppers and whipped with belts: Vigilante justice goes viral on Peru's streets as residents post Facebook videos of how they're taking matters into their own hands

  • WARNING GRAPHIC CONTENT 
  • 'Catch your Thief' movement in Peru caught on through Facebook pages
  • More than 100 separate Facebook groups have sprung up in recent months
  • Punishments range from being stripped naked to eating raw chili peppers
  • Communities don't have faith in the police force to bring justice to thieves

Terrified: Hundreds of videos and photos have been posted online, as vigilante justice has gone viral in Peru

Terrified: Hundreds of videos and photos have been posted online, as vigilante justice has gone viral in Peru

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.

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. 

Scroll down for videos 

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

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

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'.

We decided to spread a message in the community - the next time we catch a criminal, we won't call the police but we will punish them ourselves.
Cecilia Rodrigues, the housewife from Huancayo who inspired the trend

The pages are updated with new videos daily, despite Peru's penal code ruling up to four years in prison for inflicting bodily harm on individuals, and up to 25 years for causing death.

But with no prosecutions of the vigilantes so far, civilians have no problems being seen brazenly dishing out justice in public acts which have become increasingly violent.

On one page, a young teenager is seen being hit so hard his features become disfigured, while in another a man is held by his legs and arms and struck repeatedly on the back and legs with a pole.

Even so, the campaign continues to gain support across Peru, with a recent survey finding that 53 per cent of the population approve of the new way of dealing with criminals.

The vigilante trend began last month when Cecilia Rodrigues, a housewife from Huancayo, central Peru, helped her neighbour apprehend an intruder who had been found burgling her house.

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

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

The women, along with other locals, held the thief for two hours until the police arrived and took him away - but she later discovered that officers had let him go after just 30 minutes.

She said: 'From that day onwards, we decided to spread a message in the community - the next time we catch a criminal, we won't call the police but we will punish them ourselves.'

Her Facebook page Chapa Tu Choro (Catch Your Thief) struck a chord with other disgruntled victims of crime around the country and thousands have adopted Cecilia'a cause as their own.

In late August, a Facebook event called 'Catch Your Thief and Leave Him Paralytic' amassed 60,000 attendees before it was taken down.

Supporters blame distrust and disapproval of the country's police force and justice system, which they claim are letting down ordinary people, on the crime-stopping campaign's popularity.

A recent poll found that, while over a third of the population has fallen victim to a crime, just 34 per cent of Peruvians trust the country's law enforcement to catch and jail the perpetrators.

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

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

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

One high profile case which garnered further support for the vigilantes happened at the end of August, when 56 youths burst into a home on the outskirts of Lima, ransacking the house and causing £10,000 in damages.

Police caught the gang red-handed, yet on September 1 a judge inexplicably released 53 of the accused.

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.

Vigilantes have also been known to raid brothels, leaving welts on women they have whipped and often setting fire to mattresses and other furniture in the street.

Most of the occasions, though, continue to be impromptu attacks by angry locals following a criminal act. 

No control: With no prosecutions of the vigilantes so far, civilians have no problems being seen brazenly dishing out justice in public acts which have become increasingly violent

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

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

However, with increasingly violent acts of revenge now being meted out all over the country, even Celicia Rodrigues now feels the movement she helped start might be getting out of hand.

She said: 'I didn't imagine the campaign would catch on the way it did.

'I do accept that it has got out of control and that some are taking the violence too far, which I'm not justifying but I do understand.

'We are living in a failing state, which is not fulfilling its duty of giving us all security.'

But 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.

He was in fact a curious neighhour who had gone out to see what had happened with the truck when locals grabbed him.

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