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Boliviana de Aviación (BoA), was founded on 24 October 2007 by the Bolivian government under president Evo Morales, who signed Supreme Decree 29318 into law, establishing the new airline as a strategic state-owned enterprise with the purpose of sustaining the Bolivian air travel market, which had been left exposed during the downturn of Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano (LAB), the country's former flag ...
Boliviana de Aviación [1] OB BOV BOLIVIANA Jorge Wilstermann International Airport: 2007 EcoJet: 8J ECO ECOJET Jorge Wilstermann International Airport: 2013 Lineas Aéreas Canedo: LCN CANEDO Jorge Wilstermann International Airport: 1979 Sky Team Aviator: El Trompillo Airport: 2012 TAM Empresa Pública: EPT TAMEP 2019 Successor to TAM Bolivia
Viru Viru International Airport (IATA: VVI, ICAO: SLVR) in Santa Cruz de la Sierra is Bolivia's largest international airport.Viru Viru handles domestic, regional, and international flights from Bolivia, North America, South America and Europe and serves as a focus city for Bolivia's biggest airline Boliviana de Aviación.
Comercializadora Aerea Mixta Boliviana (CAMBA) 1960: 1999: Meat carrier Compañia Boliviana de Aviación: 1968: 1997: Empresa Industria Ganadera: 1970: 1970: Meat carrier Fri Reyes: 1960: 1994: Meat carrier Frigorifico Cooperativo Los Andes: 1950: 1964: Meat carrier Frigorifico Movima (FRIMO) 1967: 1981: Meat carrier Frigorifico Santa Rita 1970 ...
Boliviana de Aviación; E. EcoJet (airline) T. Transportes Aéreos Bolivianos This page was last edited on 28 January 2018, at 20:33 (UTC). Text is available under ...
27 August 1959: an Aerolíneas Argentinas–owned de Havilland DH-106 Comet 4, with registration LV-AHP, was operating a flight from Buenos Aires to Asunción. While on approach to Asunción, bad weather caused a forced landing close to the airport. A crew member and a passenger died. [33]
A Boeing 727-100 from AeroSur featuring the airline's first livery. AeroSur was established in April 1992, following the deregulation of the Bolivian airline market, which had been previously controlled by the then state-owned airline Lloyd Aéreo Boliviano (LAB), Bolivia's flag carrier, which had been in service since 1925, making it South America's second oldest airline.
Línea Aérea Amaszonas S.A. [note 1] operating as Amas Bolivia (legally as Compañía de Servicios de Transporte Aéreo Amaszonas S.A.) was a regional airline based in Bolivia, headquartered in Santa Cruz de la Sierra with its administrative center in La Paz. [2]