Hartford Courant

Southwest may fly to foreign destinatio­ns in ’21

- By Kyle Arnold Dallas Morning News

DALLAS — Southwest Airlines CEO Gary Kelly says the carrier plans to be flying to all of its internatio­nal destinatio­ns by early 2021.

In a video posted to Twitter, Kelly said Southwest is making plans to go back to more internatio­nal destinatio­ns this fall and eventually to all 15 in Central America and the Caribbean by early next year.

However, much of that will depend on travel restrictio­ns in those countries and demand from customers to travel to mostly leisure destinatio­ns, he said.

“We know these are important destinatio­ns for our customers and we’re working diligently to resume service when it is safe and meets the needs of our business,” Kelly said. “And our hope is to resume service to all of our previously served internatio­nal destinatio­ns by early 2021.”

The Dallas-based carrier had been mostly closed to internatio­nal flying since late March, when many foreign countries enacted travel restrictio­ns and demand dried up.

Southwest was able to relaunch internatio­nal service to four destinatio­ns on July 1, including Cancun and Los Cabos in Mexico, Montego Bay in Jamaica and Nassau, Bahamas.

But there have been hiccups, too. Southwest had hoped to resume flights to Havana, Cuba, from Florida on July 1, but had to hold off because of travel restrictio­ns in Cuba to prevent the spread of

COVID-19. It now hopes to restart that route Aug. 1, Kelly said.

And Southwest only has plans to return to internatio­nal destinatio­ns if it makes sense financiall­y, Kelly added.

Southwest has been aggressive­ly ramping up schedules in the United States for the summer months.

But flying internatio­nally still poses problems for customers over uncertain travel restrictio­ns.

Restrictio­ns remain on U.S. passengers traveling to foreign countries, such as Mexico. Land crossings are restricted to only “essential” travelers and the U.S. and Mexican embassies specifical­ly say that tourism is not considered essential.

That restrictio­n is set to run through at least July 21.

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