Domestic flights restart in Argentina after seven-month stoppage
Argentina resumed regular domestic flights on Thursday after an interruption of seven months due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Services are limited to essential workers and those needing medical treatment for now, with only Formosa maintaining ban on aviation.
Argentina resumed regular domestic flights on Thursday after an interruption of seven months due to the Covid-19 pandemic, although within a format of restrictions and health protocols limiting operations.
"The revival of connectivity will be gradual, giving priority to health," declared the Transport Ministry, only allowing essential workers and persons needing to travel for health reasons to board flights for now.
Jujuy was the first Aerolíneas Argentinas destination out of Ezeiza Airport on Thursday with a further three flights to Mendoza, Tucumán and Tierra del Fuego later the same day.
The protocol requires passengers to wear a face-mask and show a travel certificate while some provinces also require proof of testing negative for Covid-19 before boarding aircraft or arrival.
Formosa, the province with the least cases of Covid-19 (147), is the only district to have maintained a ban on incoming flights for now, maintaining strict control over its frontier with Paraguay and other borders.
Regular flights in Argentina were interrupted on March 20 when the government decreed a general quarantine restricting public transport and closing frontiers although various other restrictions on industrial and commercial activities, as well as open-air recreation, have been gradually lifted since then.
Argentina recently became one of just six countries in the world to reach a seven-digit total of cases with its death toll topping 27,000.
Frontiers remain closed while international airlines can only operate flights to transport Argentine citizens or residents who must observe 14 days of quarantine upon arrival.
Long-distance land and local public transport remain limited to essential workers while for industrial and commercial activities, employees must arrange transport for their workers.
– TIMES/AFP
related news
-
Fernández de Kirchner accuses Milei of subjecting Argentines to ‘pointless sacrifice’
-
Heker opens Book Fair with strong speech against Milei's austerity
-
Book fair serves as beacon of hope resilience amid economic crisis
-
Milei, indigenous authors and virtual reality at Buenos Aires Book Fair
-
Gaza conflict shows limits of Argentina and Brazil’s influence in Middle East
-
Five dogs and a million reds
-
Missing the point
-
Jorge Lanata: ‘President Milei has the right to speak and criticise, but not to say just anything’
-
Moving Embassy to Jerusalem is 'important step,’ says Israeli vice-ambassador
-
Give us more education