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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkTravel & Outdoors 

500 Pilots, Flight Attendants March in Mexico City
email this pageprint this pageemail usAssociated Press
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August 02, 2010



Mexico City - More than 500 pilots and flight attendants with financially troubled Mexicana de Aviacion demonstrated inside Mexico City's airport on Sunday to protest possible layoffs or salary reductions.

Pilots and attendants chanting "Inept businessmen, enough!" marched by Mexicana's counter holding banners that read "Pilots in defense of jobs and passenger safety."

Pilots' union president Fernando Perfecto said they sent a letter to President Felipe Calderon asking him to intervene in their contract negotiations with Mexicana.

"Employment, Mr. President, a topic that you enshrined as the cornerstone of your administration, is being seriously harmed by the grave financial and corporate deterioration of Mexicana de Aviacion," the letter said.

The company is suggesting layoffs, salary reductions and less training as part of a new workers contract that is looking to slash expenses, Perfecto said. He said air carrier executives have told the union the airline could file for bankruptcy in the coming weeks.

Flight attendant union President Lizzeth Clavel said Mexicana is proposing to lay off 500 attendants.

"The company has been converted into a nonviable product and its directors will have to answer to society and to justice for that," Perfecto said.

No one answered calls at Mexicana's headquarters seeking comment Sunday but company executives have said the air carrier is going through a critical financial situation and that it is analyzing ways to keep operating.

Perfecto and Clavel said Mexicana gave the unions until August 9 to reach a new labor agreement.

Mexicana Airlines flies to more than 65 national and international destinations, including the United States, Canada, Central and South America and Europe. Mexicana transported 11.1 million passengers in 2009, the company said on its website.



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