Second airline suspends flights to Venezuela

Oil-rich Venezuela has been hit hard by the global drop in oil prices and suffers from high inflation and a chronic shortage of basic goods.

The largest airline in Latin America, Latam, says it is suspending its flights to Venezuela because of the worsening economic situation.

The suspension came a day after Germany’s Lufthansa said it would suspend its services to the country.

The German company said Venezuela owed it millions in ticket revenues.

Oil-rich Venezuela has been hit hard by the global drop in oil prices and suffers from high inflation and a chronic shortage of basic goods.

Several airline companies have said that currency controls in Venezuela made it impossible for airlines to convert their earnings into dollars and send the money abroad.

In a statement, Latam airlines said it would suspend its operations to Caracas airport “temporarily and for an unspecified time”.

It said flights on its Sao Paulo to Caracas route would end first, within days, and the other routes it runs to Caracas from Lima and Santiago would be halted by the end of July.

An empty supermarket in Caracas, May 2016Image copyrightAFP
Image captionSupermarkets in Caracas lack many basic goods

Strict currency controls were first imposed in Venezuela in 2003 by late President Hugo Chavez.

The restrictions were further tightened two years ago, forcing several airlines to reduce their operations in the country as they struggled to repatriate billions of dollars in revenue held in the local currency – the bolivar.

Some airlines are now requiring passengers to pay their fares in dollars.

Venezuela’s government says it is using its foreign reserves – which are now scarce – to pay for essential items such as medicines and industrial machinery.

Recently Coca-Cola said it would be halting production of some of its soft drinks because of a lack of sugar while the tyre and rubber products company Bridgestone also ended its more than 60-year relationship with the country.

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