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Air Canada, WestJet and Air Transat resume Mexico flights after violence
Summary
Three Canadian carriers said they will resume scheduled service to parts of Mexico after violence that followed the reported death of a cartel leader; Air Canada said it consulted Canadian and Mexican authorities and will resume flights from several cities on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Content
Three Canadian airlines are returning to scheduled service on routes to parts of Mexico after cancelling flights in response to unrest. The disruption followed the reported death of a cartel leader during a government operation, which prompted authorities to warn residents in some areas to shelter in place. Air Canada, WestJet and Air Transat announced resumption of service and said they are monitoring conditions. Air Canada also said it consulted with Canadian and Mexican authorities as part of its decision.
Key details:
- Air Canada, WestJet and Air Transat announced they will resume scheduled flights to affected destinations in Mexico, including Puerto Vallarta.
- The violence was reported after the death of a cartel leader during a government operation, and local authorities advised temporary sheltering in some areas.
- Air Canada said it consulted the Government of Canada and Mexican authorities, noted specific resumption dates from Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver to Puerto Vallarta on Tuesday and from Toronto to Guadalajara on Wednesday, and said it would notify passengers whose flights had been cancelled.
Summary:
The announcements indicate airlines are restoring scheduled connections after the recent unrest, and carriers said they will continue to monitor developments. Further operational changes or timing beyond the listed resumption dates are undetermined at this time.
