ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1997, Roanoke Times

DATE: Thursday, April 24, 1997               TAG: 9704240053
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL   PAGE: A-1  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: LIMA, PERU
SOURCE: CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


COMMANDOS WERE EVERYWHERE, BLASTING SOLDIERS POPPED OUT OF TUNNELS LIKE MOLES

Unlike the rebels, some of the hostages were ready because one captive had been tipped off via a radio that he had kept hidden during the ordeal.

Tipped off by a hidden radio that rescuers were about to blow their way into the Japanese ambassador's home, one of the 72 hostages thought it was a joke - gallows humor. For another, the three-minute warning seemed like an eternity.

Downstairs in the reception area, eight rebels wearing the T-shirts of their favorite Peruvian teams were having fun, playing a four-on-four game of soccer with a makeshift ball made out of rolled-up, taped curtain.

With a boom, the floor suddenly buckled beneath the rebels from a blast set off in a tunnel dug under the reception hall, and 140 commandos rushed in with guns blasting. After four months of captivity, the hostages were free, all 14 of their guerrilla captors dead.

Also dead was one hostage, who reportedly suffered a heart attack after being wounded, and two soldiers. But exactly how did Peru's security forces pull off a raid that rivaled some of the most stunning hostage rescues in years?

With patience, detailed planning and even a bold warning to the hostages just ahead of the raid.

``We'll free you in three minutes,'' authorities reportedly told a retired naval officer who had been able to hide his radio receiver from rebels for the four months. The hostage, identified by Lima's El Sol newspaper as retired Adm. Luis Giampietri Rojas, quickly passed the word.

For Bolivian Ambassador Jorge Gumucio, the wait ``seemed like forever.''

Another captive, Roman Catholic priest Juan Julio Wicht, had just finished a game of chess when someone whispered that the rescue was imminent.

``He tells us that they're going to free us in a few minutes, everything will be OK. I thought it was a joke, because we've made a lot of black-humor jokes,'' he said.

The rebels, many of them teen-agers, had become careless. Frustrated by months of being cooped up in the mansion, they had been playing soccer for 20 minutes when the floor exploded. Police had burrowed under the building over the months since the Dec. 17 takeover, monitoring rebel discussions and movements and planting explosives in the tunnel.

The surprised soccer players - who included rebel leader Nestor Cerpa - grabbed their weapons and tried to run for the stairs, but soldiers gunned them down, President Alberto Fujimori said Wednesday.

Commandos entering through upstairs windows and from the roof cornered the three guerrillas who were watching the soccer game from upstairs and another three who were on guard.

One soldier pushed open a door and was felled by automatic rifle fire from a rebel inside. Another was shot dead as he ushered Foreign Minister Francisco Tudela, one of the top-ranking hostages, to safety across the roof.

But the commandos were everywhere, blasting through the front door, blowing a hole in the roof and even popping up like moles out of a tunnel that let out in the garden.

Unlike the rebels, some of the hostages were ready. They sprawled on the floor and covered their faces so guerrillas couldn't identify the higher-ranking captives for what they feared would be an execution.

``Don't move, don't move,'' Japanese Ambassador Morihisa Aoki warned other hostages as they lay choking on billowing smoke while explosions shook the walls.

Somebody dragged a mattress over Aoki's head. Others covered their heads with books, sheets and pillows. Then they got to their feet and fled, one in his underwear and clutching his trousers.

Commandos had plenty of time to plan their split-second raid as they trained at a crude wooden replica of the ambassador's home in the dusty hills outside Lima.

The tunnel, a key in the rescue's success, led to several points within the compound - including the kitchen, the main reception area and under the tent set up in the back garden for the cocktail party that the rebels stormed Dec. 17.

Fujimori said commandos had been in the well-ventilated tunnel since Sunday, awaiting the order to attack.

The newspaper La Republica said professional miners started building the tunnel in January, with four-man teams working in four-hour shifts. It said police played martial music over huge speakers outside the residence to mask the sound of the digging. At the time, many speculated the music was part of a psychological warfare campaign against the rebels.

Part of the tunnel reportedly caved in at one point, slightly injuring some of the miners. In March, the rebels said they could hear sounds of the tunnel being dug and angrily cut off talks.

For Peru's security forces, it was a big boost after an inconclusive 1995 border war with much-smaller Ecuador, as well as the intelligence lapses that allowed guerrillas to seize the ambassador's home in the first place.

The guerrillas, too, had been preparing for an attack as recently as a few days ago, warning the hostages that they would all die together if the government attempted a raid. ``We're going to kill all of you, and Fujimori will get the blame for the massacre,'' Gumucio quoted rebel leader Cerpa as telling his captives.

In their weekly exercises, rebels pointed their guns at the hostages and lieutenants shouted orders to throw grenades at them. But their guard was down on the day that counted.

``Apparently, the subversives didn't have people outside who could see something was happening and communicate with those inside,'' said Enrique Obando, an expert on the Peruvian military. ``They could at least have told them not to play football that day.''

Guns held high in triumph after the raid, the rescuers showed their feeling for the guerrillas by stomping on the red Tupac Amaru rebel flag that had fluttered for so long over the mansion.


LENGTH: Long  :  110 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Peruvian "tunnel rats" had been in

the well-ventilated shaft since Sunday, awaiting orders to attack

the rebels and free the hostages. color. Graphic: Chart by AP.

by CNB