Berliner Boersenzeitung - Peruvian schoolkids living in fear of extortion gangs

EUR -
AED 4.02547
AFN 78.958383
ALL 99.102869
AMD 431.181955
ANG 1.961978
AOA 1003.890567
ARS 1184.765046
AUD 1.813586
AWG 1.97271
AZN 1.867466
BAM 1.955265
BBD 2.22659
BDT 133.983319
BGN 1.955765
BHD 0.412787
BIF 3277.602688
BMD 1.09595
BND 1.474296
BOB 7.619914
BRL 6.405394
BSD 1.102698
BTN 94.079244
BWP 15.358795
BYN 3.608812
BYR 21480.619234
BZD 2.215094
CAD 1.559263
CDF 3148.664634
CHF 0.944431
CLF 0.02729
CLP 1047.223301
CNY 7.980215
CNH 7.994999
COP 4582.945323
CRC 557.847278
CUC 1.09595
CUP 29.042674
CVE 110.234821
CZK 25.256829
DJF 196.376238
DKK 7.461451
DOP 69.640934
DZD 146.03502
EGP 55.406831
ERN 16.439249
ETB 145.347308
FJD 2.537019
FKP 0.847795
GBP 0.850992
GEL 3.01429
GGP 0.847795
GHS 16.970527
GIP 0.847795
GMD 78.997119
GNF 9480.074229
GTQ 8.45127
GYD 228.536272
HKD 8.520633
HNL 28.038338
HRK 7.531044
HTG 143.530764
HUF 404.54591
IDR 18346.949665
ILS 4.100568
IMP 0.847795
INR 93.650132
IQD 1430.891791
IRR 46360.405806
ISK 144.204462
JEP 0.847795
JMD 172.42419
JOD 0.777072
JPY 161.061946
KES 141.527433
KGS 95.002298
KHR 4365.330633
KMF 489.529208
KPW 986.361205
KRW 1599.015607
KWD 0.337157
KYD 0.910826
KZT 556.162432
LAK 23685.841231
LBP 98372.711411
LKR 324.07413
LRD 218.985421
LSL 20.902803
LTL 3.236056
LVL 0.66293
LYD 5.289988
MAD 10.429326
MDL 19.551233
MGA 5069.578931
MKD 61.05679
MMK 2300.919896
MNT 3846.361639
MOP 8.775473
MRU 43.593447
MUR 49.000806
MVR 16.923331
MWK 1897.317993
MXN 22.386696
MYR 4.861215
MZN 70.003894
NAD 20.902803
NGN 1681.066767
NIO 40.290501
NOK 11.790932
NPR 149.910449
NZD 1.95777
OMR 0.421946
PAB 1.09595
PEN 4.037053
PGK 4.46999
PHP 62.764717
PKR 306.904853
PLN 4.245513
PYG 8757.469729
QAR 3.989667
RON 4.952931
RSD 116.586887
RUB 93.840941
RWF 1555.449869
SAR 4.110221
SBD 9.312612
SCR 15.97682
SDG 658.021292
SEK 10.947921
SGD 1.470849
SHP 0.861245
SLE 24.933268
SLL 22981.523891
SOS 624.324825
SRD 40.248477
STD 22683.951476
SVC 9.589967
SYP 14249.994157
SZL 20.902803
THB 37.792726
TJS 11.899889
TMT 3.833642
TND 3.357047
TOP 2.638671
TRY 41.641737
TTD 7.422798
TWD 36.332658
TZS 2923.758392
UAH 45.158896
UGX 4009.400205
USD 1.09595
UYU 46.167964
UZS 14171.813622
VES 77.086835
VND 28252.54745
VUV 134.896075
WST 3.078778
XAF 652.705611
XAG 0.037037
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.966325
XDR 0.817067
XOF 652.705611
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.409315
ZAR 20.929909
ZMK 9864.868719
ZMW 30.636217
ZWL 352.89544
  • RBGPF

    69.0200

    69.02

    +100%

  • RELX

    -3.2800

    48.16

    -6.81%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    10.68

    -0.56%

  • AZN

    -5.4600

    68.46

    -7.98%

  • NGG

    -3.4600

    65.93

    -5.25%

  • GSK

    -2.4800

    36.53

    -6.79%

  • BTI

    -2.0600

    39.86

    -5.17%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    22.83

    +0.7%

  • RIO

    -3.7600

    54.67

    -6.88%

  • BCC

    0.8100

    95.44

    +0.85%

  • JRI

    -0.8600

    11.96

    -7.19%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    22.71

    +0.22%

  • VOD

    -0.8700

    8.5

    -10.24%

  • RYCEF

    -1.5500

    8.25

    -18.79%

  • BP

    -2.9600

    28.38

    -10.43%

Peruvian schoolkids living in fear of extortion gangs
Peruvian schoolkids living in fear of extortion gangs / Photo: ERNESTO BENAVIDES - AFP

Peruvian schoolkids living in fear of extortion gangs

First they came for shop owners and bus drivers, ordering them to pay protection money on pain of death.

Text size:

Now the extortion gangs terrorising Peru have set their sights on fee-paying schools, threatening to kill staff or parents "inside or outside" the classroom unless they fork out tens of thousands of dollars.

Fearing for pupils' safety, hundreds of private schools have shut their doors and moved classes online in recent months, highlighting the worsening security crisis in the gang-plagued South American country.

The southern hemisphere's new school year began in March but for pupils of San Vicente primary and secondary school in northern Lima it only really started this week.

Classes had barely begun last month when a gang attacked the school with explosives for refusing to pay $27,000 in protection money.

No-one was injured in the attack, which damaged the entrance door, but the school's 1,200 students were immediately ordered to stay home for a month.

When they returned this week, children pulling brightly-colored bags on wheels and anxious parents gripping their hands were greeted by a sobering sight: five soldiers in fatigues with assault rifles and face masks standing guard at the entrance.

- 'Like a pandemic, with weapons' -

Extortion is rife across Latin America but has grown to colossal proportions in Peru, where local gangs and transnational outfits like Venezuela's Tren de Aragua are accused of holding entire towns to ransom.

Million-dollar profits make the shakedown business more lucrative than drug or human trafficking, according to intelligence sources.

President Dina Boluarte in March declared a month-long state of emergency in Lima, sending soldiers into the streets to help keep the peace after a wave of killings linked to extortion -- including that of a cumbia music star Paul Flores.

Schools are increasingly targets for crime syndicates, which see rich pickings in establishments like San Vicente that charges $1,485 in annual tuition fees.

Giannina Miranda, president of the Freedom to Educate Collective, an association of private schools, told AFP 325 establishments across the country had been forced to suspend classroom learning indefinitely.

In all, 500 private schools have been affected by racketeering, she said.

"It's like a pandemic, but with weapons," the 40-year-old father of a boy that attends San Vicente school told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The man said he lived in fear of "the most precious thing, our children" getting hurt.

- Kill 'inside or outside' school -

Before the attack, San Vicente's management had received a WhatsApp message from unknown persons demanding 100,000 Peruvian soles (around $27,000) to not target the school.

After the attack the school received a new threat by video.

"I ALREADY BLEW UP YOUR SCHOOL AND YOU HAVE STILL HAVE NOT GIVEN ME A SOLUTION," read a message written on a white page, which was surrounded by bullets, rifles and pistols.

It ended with a threat to kill a security guard, teacher or parent "inside or outside the school."

A 70-year-old woman dropping off her grandchild at San Vicente told AFP that faced with "so much fear and tension," many families were considering keeping their children at home.

The 30-year-old mother of a six-year-old boy who attends another private school in northern Lima, Pitagoras, that has also suspended classes over racketeering, told AFP she struggled to answer her son when he asked whether "something very bad is happening."

Wearing sunglasses and a face mask to conceal her identity, she said: "I have to teach my son that when he goes back to school if he hears a shot or if he hears an explosion, he has to throw himself under his desk for protection."

- President under pressure -

According to Peruvian police, the number of complaints filed for racketeering fell 13 percent year-on-year in 2024, to 19,443.

But authorities admitted that many victims don't report threats or attacks to the police, out of fear for their lives.

In the first three months of the year, 459 homicides were recorded in urban areas in Peru -- the highest figure in two decades.

The mother of another student at Pitagoras compared the climate of terror to that instilled by a brutal left-wing insurgency in Peru in the 1980s and 1990s.

The situation has battered Boluarte's already shaky approval ratings.

A recent poll showed 93 percent of Peruvians unhappy with her leadership.

(G.Gruner--BBZ)