As Cuba begins funeral services for its former leader Fidel Castro, US airlines are launching their first direct flights to its capital city of Havana. At 0730 on Monday morning, an American Airlines flight took off from Miami, Florida for an hour-long trip to Havana, the first scheduled commercial route to the city, the Miami Herald reported. It was followed by a JetBlue flight (photo) that left for Havana from JFK in New York City at 0858.Rico says it's still his intention to go with the fiancee, unless Trump (the idiot) fucks it up...
In the coming weeks, United, Delta, Spirit, Frontier, Alaska, and Southwest all plan to offer regular flights to and from Cuba from different US airports, according to USA Today. Here’s the complete list:United will offer direct flights from Houston and Newark, New Jersey.The price of flights to Cuba’s capital— which had been off-limits to American tourists for more than five decades— vary greatly, depending on your point of origin and dates of travel. For instance, as of Monday morning, the lowest round-trip fare on Delta’s website for round-trip flights from Miami to Havana cost a whopping $1,188. However, a search for flights on United’s website found that you could score round-trip tickets for as low as $284 in the coming weeks.
Delta will operate direct flights from Atlanta, JFK, and Miami.
Spirit will fly direct from Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
Frontier plans to offer direct flights from Miami and one-stop flights from Denver and Las Vegas.
Alaska will run direct flights from Los Angeles, California and one-stop flights from Seattle, Washington.
JetBlue will fly direct from JFK and Fort Lauderdale and Orlando, Florida.
Southwest will operate direct flights from Fort Lauderdale and Tampa, Florida.
These are not the first commercial flights offered between the US and Cuba: this summer, JetBlue launched the first commercial flight between the two nations, from Fort Lauderdale, Florida to Santa Clara, Cuba. Havana had been off limits to US airlines since aviation officials hoped to test the routes on smaller cities before opening up travel to Cuba’s busiest destination.
The round-trip service to Havana comes as the country grapples with the death last week of its former leader, Fidel Castro. Diplomatic relations between the two nations ceased after Castro’s Communist regime took power in 1959. In the final decade of his life, however, Castro watched as Cuba’s current leader, his younger brother Raul, struck a deal with the Obama administration to resume normal relations between the US and Cuba, thus opening up travel between the two nations.
If you have a hankering to see Havana, you might want to go before President-elect Donald Trump takes office in January.
29 November 2016
Airlines launch flights to Havana
From Money, an article by Kerry Close about flying to Cuba:
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