Pubdate: Thu, 01 Feb 2001 Source: Reuters Copyright: 2001 Reuters Limited Author: Marco Aquino DRUG LORD SAYS MONTESINOS TIPPED HIM OFF ON U.S. RAID LIMA, Peru (Reuters) - A jailed drug lord has testified that Peru's fugitive former spy chief Vladimiro Montesinos once tipped him off about a planned U.S. anti-drug operation. Peruvian drug lord Demetrio Chavez, known by the nickname ''Vaticano'', also said that he cut links with the spy chief when Montesinos asked him to double to $100,000 the monthly sum he received to give free rein to cocaine traffickers in Peru's Campanilla central jungle drug heartland, the head of a congressional commission probing Montesinos said on Thursday. ``He told me by radio to get out of there urgently because an operation was planned within 10 or 12 days,'' Vaticano said in his interview with the commission last month. A tape of the interview was aired at a news conference in Congress. Vaticano, arrested in Colombia in 1994, made waves in 1996 when he accused Montesinos of accepting $50,000 a month between July 1991 and June 1992, as well as $15,000 per drug flight. He later retracted the allegation in confused and incoherent testimony at his trial. ``During that year, Vaticano said he gave Montesinos an extra $100,000 in November,'' David Waisman, head of the congressional commission investigating the fortune Montesinos stashed in overseas bank accounts, told the news conference. Investigators say much of the cash in Montesinos' secret accounts came from illicit arms operations. Authorities have frozen $70 million in Swiss banks alone and are investigating a string of other accounts. The cash Vaticano gave him came from bribes paid by drug traffickers in the area. ``The groups made 280 flights a year,'' Waisman said. Investigators say Montesinos, who was the right-hand man of disgraced ex-President Alberto Fujimori (news - web sites) for a decade, ran a mafia penetrating Peru's military, courts, Congress and media. He sparked an unprecedented scandal last September when a video was aired showing him apparently bribing a congressman. The crisis eventually toppled Fujimori in November. Since then, a string of ``Vladivideos'' secretly taped by the ex-spy chief have compromised politicians, judges and business leaders. Flash Jewelry, Gun Vaticano said he gave Montesinos silver jewelry, expensive watches and gold chains as well as money. The ex-spy chief's taste is already known -- Fujimori seized diamond encrusted watches and jewelry worth $1 million from his home. ``In return, Montesinos gave Vaticano a pistol engraved with his (Montesinos') initials,'' Waisman said. The commission chief said Vaticano and Montesinos ended their alliance at the end of 1992 when the ex-spy chief tried to up the price of his protection to $100,000 a month. ``The answer was no and Vaticano told us that Montesinos said, 'That's done it. You've blown it now,''' Waisman said. Vaticano, who is serving a life sentence for drugs and guerrilla collaboration charges, was held in a military jail until last week when he was transferred to a civilian prison. According to the congressional commission, Vaticano said he was tortured by the military to change his testimony in order not to implicate Montesinos. ``He has a visible scar on his head, probably from specialized surgery to affect his memory,'' Waisman said. - ---