The Americas | When gangs rule

Rural Colombia welcomes gangs that mete out vigilante justice 

Using grisly methods, the gangs enforce social conservatism

A member of the Oficina de Envigado criminal organization holds his gun next to religious images at a house in Medellin, Colombia.
Photograph: Getty Images
|SAN ANTONIO, Colombia

María Álvarez (not her real name) is a devout Catholic. She was relieved last year when the Ismael Ruiz gang, an offshoot of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), set up operations in her rural home town of San Antonio. They promised to end what Ms Álvarez calls “immoral behaviours”. Then, two months ago, the gang ran her son out of town. They disliked his motorcycle stunts, long hair and earrings. She misses him, but maintains that “social cleansing prevents people from stealing from hard-working people like us, and it helps to make sure our young people behave.”

This article appeared in the The Americas section of the print edition under the headline “Deliver us from evil”

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