Venezuela suspended air links with Panama in July 2024
The resumption of flights is expected to facilitate the repatriation from Panama of Venezuelan migrants deported from the US
PANAMA CITY: Panama’s civil aviation authority on Thursday announced that it would resume flights with Venezuela after nearly a year, facilitating the repatriation of Venezuelan migrants expelled from the United States.
Venezuela suspended air links with Panama in July 2024 over its refusal to recognize Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s victory in presidential elections.
The two countries at the time also suspended diplomatic relations.
The resumption of flights is expected to facilitate the repatriation from Panama of Venezuelan migrants deported from the United States.
Panamanian President Jose Raul Mulino said earlier he had received a proposal from Caracas to resume flights between the two countries.
“I will evaluate it very carefully right away,” he told his weekly press conference, adding “it is in Panama’s best interest to open commercial flights to Venezuela.”
Mulino however ruled out restoring diplomatic relations with the Caribbean nation.
Panama is one of a handful of countries that has agreed to act as a stopover for migrants expelled from the United States by President Donald Trump’s administration.
Under the plan, Panama holds the migrants in closed shelters while waiting for them to be repatriated to their homelands.
Many of those expelled so far have been from Venezuela and other South American countries.
Panama has also been grappling with a reverse flow of thousands of migrants returning home through Central America after failing to gain entry to the Untied States.
In the absence of flights between Panama and Venezuela, many of the migrants were left to organize their own transport home, either by boat or overland through the treacherous Darien jungle on Panama’s border with Colombia.
Panama resumes flights to Venezuela, allowing for migrant returns
Panama resumes flights to Venezuela, allowing for migrant returns
