Current:Home > MyMexico’s army-run airline takes to the skies, with first flight to the resort of Tulum -RiskRadar
Mexico’s army-run airline takes to the skies, with first flight to the resort of Tulum
View
Date:2025-04-18 10:05:54
MEXICO CITY (AP) — Mexico launched its army-run airline Tuesday, when the first Mexicana airlines flight took off from Mexico City bound for the Caribbean resort of Tulum.
It was another sign of the outsized role that President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has given to Mexico’s armed forces. The airline’s military-run holding company now also operates about a dozen airports, hotels, trains, the country’s customs service and tourist parks.
Gen. Luís Cresencio Sandoval, Mexico’s defense secretary, said that having all those diverse businesses run by the military was “common in developed countries.”
In fact, only a few countries like Cuba, Sri Lanka, Argentina and Colombia have military-run airlines. They are mostly small carriers with a handful of prop planes that operate mostly on under-served or remote domestic routes.
But the Mexicana airline plans to carry tourists from Mexican cities to resorts like Cancun, Puerto Vallarta, Los Cabos, Zihuatanejo, Acapulco and Mazatlan. Flights appear to be scheduled every three or four days, largely on weekends.
The carrier hopes to compete mainly on price: the first 425 tickets sold offered prices of about $92 for the flight from Mexico City to Tulum, which the government claimed was about one-third cheaper than commercial airlines.
Mexicana also hopes to fly to 16 small regional airports that currently have no flights or very few. For those worried about being told to “Fasten your seatbelt, and that’s an order,” the cabin crew on the Mexicana flight appeared to be civilians. In Mexico, the air force is a wing of the army.
Sandoval said the airline began operations with three Boeing jets and two smaller leased Embraer planes, and hopes to lease or acquire five more jets in early 2024.
López Obrador called the takeoff of the first Boeing 737-800 jet “a historic event” and a “new stage,” marking the return of the formerly government-run airline Mexicana, which had been privatized, then went bankrupt and finally closed in 2010.
The airline combines Lopez Obrador’s reliance on the military — which he claims is the most incorruptible and patriotic arm of the government — and his nostalgia for the state-run companies that dominated Mexico’s economy until widespread privatizations were carried out in the 1980s.
López Obrador recalled fondly the days when government-run firms operated everything from oil, gas, electricity and mining, to airlines and telephone service. He bashed the privatizations, which were carried out because Mexico’s indebted government could no longer afford to operate the inefficient, state-owned companies.
“They carried out a big fraud,” the president said at his daily morning news briefing. “They deceived a lot of people, saying these state-run companies didn’t work.”
In fact, the state-run companies in Mexico accumulated a well-deserved reputation for inefficiency, poor service, corruption and political control. For example, Mexico’s state-run paper distribution company often refused to sell newsprint to opposition newspapers.
When the national telephone company was owned by the government, customers routinely had to wait years to get a phone line installed, and were required to buy shares in the company in order to eventually get service, problems that rapidly disappeared after it was privatized in 1990.
While unable to restore the government-run companies to their former glory, the administration depicts its efforts to recreate them on a smaller scale as part of a historic battle to return Mexico’s economy to a more collectivist past.
“This will be the great legacy of your administration, and will echo throughout eternity,” the air traffic controller at Mexico City’s Felipe Angeles airport intoned as the first Mexicana flight took off.
López Obrador has also put the military in charge of many of the country’s infrastructure building projects, and given it the lead role in domestic law enforcement.
For example, the army built both the Felipe Angeles airport and the one in Tulum.
Apart from boosting traffic at the underused Felipe Angeles airport, the army-run Mexicana apparently will provide flights to feed passengers into the president’s Maya Train tourism project. The army is also building that train line, which will connect beach resorts and archaeological sites on the Yucatan Peninsula.
The army, which has no experience running commercial flights, has created a subsidiary to be in charge of Mexicana.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Perspective: What you're actually paying for these free digital platforms
- Coach Deion Sanders, Colorado illuminate the pros and cons of wide-open transfer portal
- Takeaways from the start of week 2 of testimony in Trump’s hush money trial
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- The deadline to consolidate some student loans to receive forgiveness is here. Here’s what to know
- Coach Deion Sanders, Colorado illuminate the pros and cons of wide-open transfer portal
- Trump says states should decide on prosecuting women for abortions, has no comment on abortion pill
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- An Alabama Senate committee votes to reverse course, fund summer food program for low-income kids
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Free Krispy Kreme: Get a free dozen doughnuts through chain's new rewards program
- Homeless families face limits on shelter stays as Massachusetts grapples with migrant influx
- 2024 NFL draft steals: Steelers have two picks among top 10 in best value
- 'Most Whopper
- An Alabama Senate committee votes to reverse course, fund summer food program for low-income kids
- 67-year-old woman killed, 14 people injured after SUV crashes through New Mexico thrift store
- Japan Airlines flight canceled after captain got drunk and became disorderly at Dallas hotel
Recommendation
The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
Man accused of kicking bison at Yellowstone National Park is injured by animal and then arrested on alcohol charge
FCC fines wireless carriers for sharing user locations without consent
Vanderpump Rules’ Rachel “Raquel” Leviss Dating New Man After Tom Sandoval Split
Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
The Best White Dresses For Every Occasion
Former MVP Mike Trout needs surgery on torn meniscus. The Angels hope he can return this season
Powerball winning numbers for April 29 drawing: Jackpot rises to $178 million