Volaris flying high
With air passengers numbers in Mexico soon estimated to reach the 2008 high of 27.6 million, Volaris director Enrique Beltranena is going on a spending spree.
With air passengers numbers in Mexico soon estimated to reach the 2008 high of 27.6 million, Volaris director Enrique Beltranena is going on a spending spree.
As of April 1, instead of dropping illegal immigrants at random points along the nearly 2,000-mile border, the U.S. government will fly them back to Mexico, where the Mexican government will take over and bus them back to their hometowns.
If the pro-environment Green Party of Mexico (PVEM) has its way, Mexicans under the age of 21 will no longer be able to buy alcohol or tobacco legally.
Contrary to the stereotype of most Mexicans being lazy, tequila-swigging good-for-nothings, a new study claims 35 percent of this nation’s citizens are in fact work addicts.
Miguel de la Madrid Hurtado, who presided over one of the most turbulent periods in recent Mexican history and was responsible for the liberalization of the national economy, died earlier this month.
Mexico, the United States and Canada have announced a joint nuclear security project to convert the fuel in Mexico’s research reactor from highly enriched uranium to low enriched uranium.
Yucatan’s two Mayan cultural projects should be completed later this year. Together, they will cost the government more than one billion pesos.