Argentina has banned until September ticket sales for commercial flights
as part of its coronavirus response, prompting an industry outcry that
the new measure will put massive strain on airlines and airports.
While the country's borders have been closed since March, the new
decree goes further in preventing until Sept. 1 the sale and purchase of
commercial flights to, from or within Argentina.To get more news about
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The spread of coronavirus “does not allow certainties” for the end of
social isolation measures, which would threaten commercial air
transportation, the decree said.
“It has been understood to be reasonable to set September 1, 2020 for
the purpose of rescheduling regular operations or requesting
authorizations for non-regular operations of passenger air transport
subject to the effective lifting of restrictions imposed on commercial
air transport and operating modalities,” the decree by the National
Civil Aviation Administration said.
Part of the decree's aim is to prevent airlines from ticketing flights not approved by the government.
“The problem was that airlines were selling tickets without having
authorization to travel to Argentine soil,” a spokesman for President
Alberto Fernandez said.
The decision prompted industry groups including ALTA, which lobbies on
behalf of Latin American airlines, to warn that the decree represented
“imminent and substantial risk” to thousands of jobs in Argentina.
“It is our responsibility to express the deep concern generated by the
resolution in question, which was not shared or agreed with the
industry and, furthermore, runs counter to the efforts of all the actors
in the sector to propose and implement a plan for responsible and safe
reactivation that re-establishes commercial activities and an essential
service for the population,” the groups said in a statement.
The presidential spokesman, however, said the decision resulted from a
“consensus between the government and the airline sector.”
The Sept. 1 timeframe was arranged with the airlines “to give time to
our authorities to bring all the Argentines who are abroad and want to
get back,” the spokesman said.
The South American nation had already closed its borders and blocked
entry to foreigners from “affected zones,” including Europe, China and
the United States.
Argentina has been under a national lockdown since March 20. The
government, over the weekend, extended the quarantine until May 10, but
said it had been successful in slowing the rate at which new cases
double.
The Wall