HRW report on Colombia's neo-paramilitary "chop houses":
Colombia: Disappearances Plague Major Port
Criminal Groups Terrorize Neighborhoods, Displace Thousands
March 20, 2014
(Bogotá) Paramilitary successor groups have abducted and disappeared scores, and possibly hundreds, of residents of the largely Afro-Colombian port of Buenaventura, Human Rights Watch said in a report and video released today. Thousands of residents have been fleeing their homes in the city each year, making Buenaventura the municipality with the highest level of ongoing forced displacement in Colombia today.
The 30-page report, The Crisis in Buenaventura: Disappearances, Dismemberment, and Displacement in Colombias Main Pacific Port, documents how many of the citys neighborhoods are dominated by powerful criminal groups that commit widespread abuses, including abducting and dismembering people, sometimes while still alive, then dumping them in the sea. The groups maintain chop-up houses (casas de pique) where they slaughter victims, according to witnesses, residents, the local Catholic church, and some officials.
The situation in Buenaventura is among the very worst weve seen in many years of working in Colombia and the region, said José Miguel Vivanco, Americas director at Human Rights Watch. Simply walking on the wrong street can get you abducted and dismembered, so its no surprise the residents are fleeing by the thousands.
Paramilitary successor groups emerged in Buenaventura after the deeply flawed official demobilization of right-wing paramilitary organizations a decade ago. Currently, the Urabeños and the Empresa are the main successor groups operating in the port city. The groups restrict residents movement attacking people if they cross invisible borders between areas controlled by rival factions recruit children, extort businesses, and routinely engage in horrific acts of violence against anyone who defies their will.
More:
http://www.hrw.org/news/2014/03/20/colombia-disappearances-plague-major-port