Marissa DuBois in Slow Motion Full Fashion Week 2023, Fashion Channel Vlog,

Friday, July 29, 2011

Cuba approves flights from 9 more American cities

ABC Charters airline said that it will offer flights between the international airport in Tampa, Florida, and Cuba, possibly starting Sept. 10, the Tampa Tribune reported on Thursday.
The Tampa airport this past March received the official authorization of U.S. Customs and Border Protection to operate direct flights to Cuba.
According to the president of ABC Charters, Tessie Aral, the firm will begin with one flight per week using a Boeing 737 that seats 145.
The company, which will resume its operations from this airport for the first time in 50 years, forecasts that it will be able to increase its service to and from Havana to two flights a week in October.
Ticket prices have not yet been established, but Aral said that they will range between $399 and $459 for a roundtrip.
Tampa International in March also began handling direct flights between the United States and the Caribbean island along with Miami, New York's JFK, Los Angeles and the international airport in Fort Myers, Florida.

Cuban travel agency Havanatur Celimar said it added the cities of Tampa, Fort Lauderdale, Baltimore, Chicago, Atlanta, New Orleans, Dallas, Houston and San Juan, Puerto Rico, to the list from where charter flights would be accepted.

Cuba is preparing for an increase in visitors from its long-time ideological foe under a recent loosening of travel restrictions by the Obama administration.

The United States, which maintains comprehensive sanctions on the communist-run island and bans tourism to Cuba, does not allow regular commercial flights between the two countries.

But the Obama administration has lifted all restrictions on Cuban Americans visiting their homeland and allowed religious, academic and other professional travel by Americans to Cuba.

Havana Celimar has a monopoly on the Cuban end of U.S. charter flights and already receives travelers on flights from Miami, New York and Los Angeles.

The number of U.S. citizens visiting Cuba increased last year by 20 percent, to 63,000, according to Cuban statistics.

Some 350,000 Cuban Americans visited Cuba in 2010 after the Obama administration lifted all restrictions on their travel.

Lawmakers argue that the Obama administration is helping prop up the Cuban government, while the White House counters more people-to-people contact is the best way to undermine the island's communist system.

President Barack Obama has threatened to veto any move to undercut his people-to-people policy toward Cuba.

Cuba has said it had 2.53 million tourists in 2010, with Canada the largest provider at nearly 945,000, followed by Britain at 174,000 and Italy at 112,000.

Tourism is one of Cuba's most important earners of foreign exchange, with revenues of $2.2 billion last year, and an important provider of jobs.

No comments:

Post a Comment