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Thousands of Canadian tourists register with Ottawa as violence in Mexico continues
Summary
Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said her Mexican counterpart told her the operation that killed a cartel leader was targeted and that the situation should stabilize in the coming days. More than 26,000 Canadians are registered with the Canadian government and commercial flights to Puerto Vallarta were temporarily canceled.
Content
An operation by Mexican authorities that resulted in the death of a cartel leader has been reported to have triggered violence in parts of Mexico, including around Puerto Vallarta. Thousands of Canadian visitors sheltered as the situation developed and many registered with the Canadian government. Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said her Mexican counterpart indicated the operation was targeted and that the situation should stabilize in the coming days. Ottawa has been in contact with Mexican authorities and announced no current plans for repatriation flights or military involvement.
Reported facts:
- Mexico's foreign minister told Anita Anand the operation was targeted and that the situation should stabilize in the coming days.
- More than 26,000 Canadians are registered with the Canadian government as being in Mexico, including about 8,000 who registered on Sunday.
- Commercial flights to Puerto Vallarta were canceled; Mexico's president said flights were expected to resume Monday or Tuesday.
- Ottawa said it has no current plans to offer repatriation flights or deploy the military, and that it received no advance notice of the operation.
Summary:
The events led to widespread registrations by Canadian travellers and disruption of commercial air service to parts of Mexico. Mexican officials have told Canadian counterparts they expect the situation to stabilize in the coming days, and Mexican authorities indicated flights may resume Monday or Tuesday. Ottawa has not announced repatriation flights or military involvement. Undetermined at this time.
