Miami Herald

Airlines suspend flights between Haiti and South Florida amid escalating violence

- BY VINOD SREEHARSHA vsreeharsh­a@miamiheral­d.com

canceled flights between South Florida and Haiti on Monday in response to Haiti’s worsening situation, which has alarmed the White House and led to a new security alert to U.S. citizens issued by the U.S. Embassy in Port-auPrince.

American Airlines suspended service between Miami Internatio­nal Airport (MIA) and Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport (PAP) through

Wednesday “as a result of civil unrest,” said Bri Harper, a spokeswoma­n, in a statement. The carrier has a daily departure and arrival.

“We will continue to monitor the situation with safety and security top of mind and will adjust our operation as needed,” she said.

JetBlue Airways canceled flights on Monday. It has daily service between Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport and Port-au-Prince. The decision was due to “recent civil unrest”, said Senior Manager of CorpoAirli­nes rate Communicat­ions Derek Dombrowski in a statement. “We continue to monitor the situation and are working closely with the U.S. Embassy and our team in Haiti to determine next steps.”

Arrivals from and departures to Port-au-Prince from Fort Lauderdale­Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport on Azul were all canceled, according to the airport flight tracker.

On Monday afternoon, Spirit Airlines, which also flies out of Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport, suspended flights to and from Portau-Prince

and Cap-Haitien through Wednesday. spokeswoma­n Nicole Aguiar said in a statement. The carrier is “closely monitoring the situation and will adjust our schedule as needed.”

On Sunrise Airways’ website, a search for flights between Miami and Haiti came up empty. That carrier had started flying between the two places last year.

The company did not immediatel­y respond to a request for informatio­n or comments.

In recent days, the country’s armed gangs have ramped up attacks on critical infrastruc­ture.

This comes after they took control of several police substation­s and are threatenin­g to take over the presidenti­al palace — a dramatic escalation in violence in what has already been a dire security environmen­t that has paralyzed the Caribbean nation since the assassinat­ion of its president in 2021.

Late Sunday, Haiti declared a 6 p.m.-to-5 a.m. curfew and a state of emergency for the next 72 hours so security forces can try to regain control.

The airlines operating between South Florida and Haiti have not said what they will do beyond Monday.

“Right now, we are monitoring to see what’s best,” said Harper, the American spokeswoma­n.

The airline also issued a travel alert that includes informatio­n such as whether passengers have to pay to change their tickets.

American also advised passengers to check flight status on the carrier’s smartphone app or website.

JetBlue advised passengers to check the company website for informatio­n about fee waivers and flight status.

Miami Herald Staff Writer Jacqueline Charles contribute­d to this report.

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