Pubdate: Fri, 19 Feb 1999 Source: Reuters Copyright: 1999 Reuters Limited. Author: Michael Christie INTERVIEW-MEXICO GOVERNOR SAYS 'TRY ME IF YOU MUST CHETUMAL, Mexico, - The outgoing governor of Mexico's top tourism state, Quintana Roo, said on Friday he was prepared to stand trial but was entirely innocent of allegations linking him to Mexico's most fearsome drug cartels. Mario Villanueva, whose state goes to the polls on Sunday, told Reuters it would be "ridiculous" if the United States paid heed to what he called "lies" about his drug ties in deciding whether to recertify Mexico as an ally in the war on narcotics. "I've become (Mexico's) most famous governor because of the slander, for my infamy unfortunately," Villanueva said in the state capital Chetumal, 280 miles (400 km) south of the beach resort of Cancun on the eastern edge of the Yucatan peninsula. "The things they have published about me are all lies, I have no links to drug-trafficking. When I say I am at the disposition of the authorities, it's for whatever they decide. If the authorities decide at some point the investigation requires judicial action ... I am prepared to confront that. "I am available. What I want is to be investigated, to have the truth prevail and to clear my name," he added. Sitting in his office at the governor's hangar at Chetumal airport before flying to Mexico City, Villanueva said claims he had allowed traffickers to turn Quintana Roo's long, cove-studded Caribbean coast into a major drug route were slanders planted by political enemies. The governor produced a report written by unknown foes, alternately chuckling or fuming over its claims that he was a cocaine addict and an alcoholic in the pay of narcos. Villanueva said he had proof but did not name the political forces allegedly behind a "campaign of defamation." "It's a political problem," he said, noting he had long adopted a relatively independent stance as a member of President Ernesto Zedillo's Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), which has ruled Mexico since 1929. Amicable and eager to talk, Villanueva said he was disturbed by reports the White House would like to have his head on a platter to boost its case for not blacklisting Mexico in the annual drug certification process, to be decided by the U.S. Congress next month. "Imagine if they destroy a (Mexican) governor in order to achieve certification, the dead drug traffickers will laugh in their graves," he said. "It's ridiculous." "It would be lamentable if they hurt me simply because of affirmations in the media or because of false information, and I tell you, they are false, lies; they are slanderous and defamatory. I cannot accept being a reason for certification." Villanueva said that when he steps down on April 5 to make way for whoever is elected on Sunday, he would prefer to be remembered for making tourism thrive -- 2 million Americans visit Cancun each year -- while achieving political stability. After almost 32 years in public service as deputy, senator, governor, mayor of Cancun and senior PRI official, he said he planned to take things easy after he is out of office. "I would like to have a ... sabbatical period, look after my wife and my young daughter ... and then become an observer of national politics, read a little, travel a little." Would he remain in Chetumal, the slightly rundown administrative capital of Quintana Roo? "That depends on my boss. My wife is my boss," he said. "But it's not very healthy for an ex-governor to remain in Chetumal for perhaps the first months or even year after leaving office because they'll start unearthing your defects." - --- MAP posted-by: Rich O'Grady