Cowed by extortion rackets


A family-owned hardware store remaining open even after receiving multiple threats from racketeers attempting to intimidate the owner into paying for protection in the populous district of Lurigancho in Lima. — AFP

BEFORE he opened a new sauna in eastern Lima, Peru, Eduardo started receiving extortion messages from a local gang. He ignored them.

Then, one night, a gunman on a motorbike opened fire on the unoccupied premises, which were still being refurbished, and a video of the attack was sent to his phone. The gang was demanding an “installation fee” of US$13,300 and a monthly payment of US$1,300 for Eduardo to be able to open his business.

This kind of extortion racket has become the bane of citizens’ existence from Mexico through Central America to Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.

Million-dollar profits make the shakedown business more lucrative than drug trafficking, human trafficking, and likely even illegal mining, said intelligence sources. Businesses small and large, transport companies, residential areas and entire towns find themselves forced to shell out payments to criminal groups.

“I walk around almost in secret because I imagine they have studied everything and know where I live, where I have breakfast, where I have lunch, where I spend the night,” said Eduardo, 40, who asked not to be identified by his real name for fear of repercussions.

In Peru, extortion has even impacted football. International striker Paolo Guerrero recently threatened to quit his club in the city of Trujillo - which is under a state of emergency over gang activity - after he received threats against his family.

Officials say the main gangs running extortion rackets are Los Pulpos in Peru, the Clan del Golfo in Colombia, and Tiguerones in Ecuador.

Venezuela’s feared Tren de Aragua has also expanded into several neighbouring countries in recent years.

The groups have become “criminal companies” in search of markets and “partners in other countries”, said Peruvian anti-crime prosecutor Jorge Chavez.

Fear of the gangs has not stopped people from filing complaints about extortion, with Peru recording more than 19,400 reports in 2023 - a five-fold increase over the past two years.

Ecuador, which is under a state of emergency over gang activity, has seen a similar increase. In Mexico, one extortion is reported every hour, according to the Coparmex business association. Across the region, gangs employ similar methods.

“We know who you are, and we know what time your business opens. We know when you go to the market, we know where your child goes to school,” are common warnings that arrive via WhatsApp, said Andres Choy, president of Peru’s Association of Shop Owners, which has 22,000 members.

A merchant showing a photograph of a threatening note she keeps in her mobile phone sent by gang members attempting to intimidate her into paying for protection. — AFPA merchant showing a photograph of a threatening note she keeps in her mobile phone sent by gang members attempting to intimidate her into paying for protection. — AFP

He estimates that 13,000 of them were blackmailed last year.

A follow-up warning might entail a “photo of a family member walking”. Many decide to close their businesses or send their children abroad, he said.

Anita, 43, a widow with two daughters, recounted how racketeers launched an explosive and shot at her hardware store in Lima in January.

“The threats changed my life. I have to hide with my girls within four walls,” she said.

The gangs have practically created a “parallel state”, in which they control territories and establish a tax system, said Ecuadoran Colonel Roberto Santamaria, police chief of Nueva Prosperina, one of the most violent districts in the gang-ridden port city of Guayaquil.

He said they often resort to using minors to collect their money as they cannot be charged. Another faction is charged with carrying out attacks on those who do not comply with demands.

Sometimes, one gang might cede the “administration” of its area to another for a regular flow of cash.

Santamaria said that in a suburb with 2,000 houses in Nueva Prosperina, each household is forced to pay a US$2 daily “tax”.

In the Colombian town of Buenaventura, home to around 300,000 people, “everyone has to pay”, whether to open a business, construct a building or carry out renovations, said Elizabeth Dickinson, an analyst with the International Crisis Group in the country.

In Peru, aside from the classic mafia protection racket, criminal groups also offer small loans with weekly interest rates of up to 20%.

“When the ‘client’ can’t pay, the extortion begins: if you don’t pay we will burn down your kiosk, grab your family, your sister or your children to hurt or kill them,” said prosecutor Chavez.

Recently, call centres have cropped up offering credit with lower interest rates via a mobile application. To get the loan, you have to share personal information which is then used to blackmail the whole family.

Criminals also use artificial intelligence to superimpose women’s faces on naked bodies, extorting victims to prevent the images from being spread further.

But while people live in fear, the wheels of business keep turning. Neither wanted to say if they eventually paid, but Eduardo opened his sauna, and Anita’s hardware store is still operating. — AFP

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