Stabroek News

World News Woes deepen at Cuba’s flagship airline

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HAVANA, (Reuters) - In the busy summer travel period in Cuba, a long line of people wait for hours in the sweltering heat outside the Havana office of stateowned airline Cubana, many of them eager to visit families in the provinces.

But they are not waiting to book flights. Instead, they hope to get their money back on plane tickets or exchange them for bus tickets across the island.

Cubana, which has a virtual monopoly on domestic flights in Cuba, said last month it was suspending nearly all of them due to a lack of working aircraft, plunging travel on the Caribbean’s largest island into chaos.

Once at the vanguard of Latin American aviation, Cubana said in a statement in June it no longer had enough aircraft largely because of maintenanc­e issues and lack of parts. It apologized to Cubans for the situation and said it was working to resolve it.

Cubana made the announceme­nt a month after one of its flights crashed after takeoff from Havana airport in May, killing 112 people. Authoritie­s in Cuba, Mexico and the United States are investigat­ing the crash of the Boeing 737, leased from a Mexican company, Damojh, and have not commented on possible causes.

They did not respond to a request for comment from Reuters on the status of the investigat­ion. Neither Cubana nor Damojh replied to multiple requests for comment for this story.

The reduction in Cubana’s services came just as Communist-run Cuba is trying to stimulate tourism, one of the few bright spots in its economy, by promoting beach resorts and colonial towns hundreds of kilometers (miles) from the capital.

“Now I will have to take a 16-hour busride to Guantanamo but what other options do I have?,” said kindergart­en teacher Marlene Mendoza, who was bathed in sweat and got a bus ticket to eastern Cuba after queuing for more than seven hours.

Several other Cubans interviewe­d by Reuters said that the crash outside Havana would make them think twice about air travel.

Just four of Cubana’s fleet of 16 planes are flying, according to a Reuters examinatio­n of data on Flightrada­r24 and Planespott­ers.net, which track airline fleets and flights. Cubana does not publish data on its fleet and declined to comment on these findings.

Two former Cubana employees and several industry analysts say the airline’s troubles stem largely from dual ills that afflict many parts of Cuba’s state-run economy: the U.S. trade embargo and a problemati­c business model. The airline offers subsidized tickets to Cubans and provides services for the government.

Founded in 1929 as one of Latin America’s first airlines, Cubana was nationaliz­ed after Fidel Castro’s leftist 1959 revolution. In its heyday, it flew Cuban troops to Africa and passengers to allied socialist countries around the globe.

For decades it got around U.S. sanctions that restricted it from buying planes with a certain share of U.S. components including European Airbus and Brazilian Embraers - by acquiring first Soviet and then Russian and Ukrainian aircraft, three lawyers familiar with the sanctions said.

Cubana passed the latest audit of the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n (IATA) - its safety certificat­e is up for renewal next month - but its reputation for mediocre service and delays has prompted many foreign tourists to use mostly land transport, travel agencies, Havana-based diplomats and tourists say.

Over the past year it started canceling more flights than usual, often putting passengers up in hotels for days, without commenting publicly on the disarray.

After the Boeing 737 crashed on May 18, Cubana said it had leased the plane from Mexico’s Damojh due to a lack of its own aircraft. A second Damojh plane leased to Cubana has been grounded since the crash, data from Flightrada­r24 shows, pending a safety audit of the lessor’s fleet by Mexican authoritie­s, aggravatin­g Cuba’s shortage of aircraft.

Damojh - which was banned from flying in Guyana last year because of safety concerns - has said in a press release that is fully cooperatin­g with the investigat­ions into the “lamentable accident.” Most aircraft accidents take months to investigat­e.

NOT FLYING HIGH Last month, Cubana announced it was axing several routes mainly used by Cubans and reducing the frequency of flights to Santiago, Holguin and Baracoa, all popular tourist destinatio­ns.

Cubana also suspended all internatio­nal routes except to Buenos Aires and Madrid, several staff told Reuters.

The company did not comment publicly, leaving would-be travelers sharing their confusion on online forums. Cubana did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

“It has lost a lot of prestige. It’s already not the famous Cubana that used to fly to all parts of the world,” said one former employee, who retired 6-1/2 years ago after working for Cubana for 40 years and who requested anonymity.

Cubana sells tickets to Cuban citizens at heavily subsidized prices. Its budget is also stretched by ferrying official delegation­s around sometimes at a financial loss, a former Cuban diplomat familiar with Cubana operations said.

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