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United Airlines said on Tuesday it will resume daily direct flights to Venezuela between Houston and Caracas, ​about eight ​years after suspending ​operations to the country.

The carrier said its services between its hub at George Bush Intercontinental ⁠Airport ‌in Houston and Simon ⁠Bolivar International Airport in Caracas will start Aug. 11.

It joins American Airlines in restarting service to Venezuela after U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy lifted a 2019 ban on U.S. airlines flying to the country in January, following a directive from President Donald Trump.

The U.S. State Department lifted Venezuela from its “Do Not ⁠Travel” list for Americans in March, issuing ‌a less serious “Reconsider Travel” advisory due ‌to risk of crime, kidnapping, terrorism, and poor health infrastructure.

“This specific flight will be critical ⁠to ferrying oil sector workers into the country as ⁠the U.S. and Venezuela ⁠work together to expand production and generate new economic opportunities,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Duffy ​said on Tuesday.

United had offered flights to Venezuela for nearly 20 years before suspending those services in 2017. The carrier plans to deploy its Boeing 737 Max ​8 aircraft on the ‌route.

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