Miami Herald

When will flights resume between Miami and Haiti? American Airlines making changes

- BY VINOD SREEHARSHA AND JACQUELINE CHARLES vsreeharsh­a@miamiheral­d.com jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

American Airlines will resume flying between Miami and Port-au-Prince on May 9, just over two months after suspending flights in and out of Haiti due to civil unrest and security concerns.

The move came one day after the country installed a new nine-member presidenti­al council that will help the country form a new government.

American Airlines will fly daily between Miami Internatio­nal Airport and Toussaint Louverture Internatio­nal Airport, and tickets are available online, the carrier said on Friday.

One-way main-cabin fares from Port-au-Prince to MIA will be capped at $705 and business-class fares capped at $1,699, excluding taxes and fees, said spokespers­on Laura Masvidal.

American will use a Boeing 737-800 with 166 seats.

The price caps came as some Haitians complained about seeing fares as high as $3,400 for one-way tickets.

On Friday, a search of American Airlines’ website for one-way flights from Miami to Port-auPrince found no availabili­ty until May 17, indicating earlier flights were sold out, Masvidal said. A one-way ticket on that day was listed at $320. The fare dropped to $125 for May 21.

A search for one-way flights from Port-auPrince to Miami also found first availabili­ty on May 17. Economy was sold out but a businesscl­ass seat for the two-hour trip was listed at $1,975. That was a result of the $1,699 capped airfare plus $276 in fees and taxes, according to the website.

The first coach ticket was not available until May 20 and was listed at $882. That reflected the capped fare of $705 plus fees and taxes.

DIRE SITUATION IN HAITI

American’s resumed flights are likely to inject some normalcy into the Caribbean country but also provide a muchneeded way in and out — for people and for supplies. All U.S. commercial airlines that fly between Haiti and the U.S. have suspended their flights since early March.

Haiti has been mired in gang-fueled violence, kidnapping­s and instabilit­y for several months. More than five million Haitians are going hungry. Gangs control more than 80% of metropolit­an Port-au-Prince.

Since January, more than 2,500 Haitians have been killed or injured, according to the U.N., the deadliest three months since the global body’s political office in Haiti began tracking gangrelate­d deaths in 2021.

OTHER AIRLINE SERVICE

American Airlines, MIA’s largest carrier, suspended flights early in March. JetBlue Airways and Spirit did so, too. Neither of them though has resumed flights between Haiti and the U.S.

JetBlue said its tentative resumption date is May 15. Spirit, a low-cost service that is based in Dania Beach and flies between Fort Lauderdale­Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport and Port-auPrince and also CapHaitien, said its service “remains suspended until further notice.”

Earlier in the week, the Biden administra­tion sent a U.S. military aircraft to Port-au-Prince weeks after notifying the U.S. Congress it would be providing millions of dollars’ worth of weapons and ammunition to help Haiti National Police officers take on the gangs. That was the first aircraft to land on the country’s main runway in nearly two months.

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