A U.S. cruise ship started its historic journey to Cuba on Sunday for the first time in 38 years. Carnival
Corp.'s Adonia left a Miami port on Sunday afternoon and sailed to
Havana, with 704 passengers aboard, including several Cuba-born
passengers.
During its
seven-day journey, the ship will also visit ports of Cienfuegos in
south-central Cuba and Santiago de Cuba in the southwest.
Carnival's cruises to Cuba will be operated by its tenth and newest line Fathom.
According
to the company, the Adonia will cruise every other week from Miami to
Cuba, with promises to engage passengers "in an ongoing cultural
exchange program that will give them the opportunity to interact with the
Cuban people."
The cruise
comes after Cuba loosened its policy of forbidding Cuban-born people
from travelling to the country by sea. The last such cruise from a U.S.
port to a Cuban destination happened in 1978.
The company
got the green light from the Cuban government to begin sailing from the
U.S. to the island on May 1 during U.S. President Barack Obama's March
20-22 trip to Havana.
Obama has
relaxed U.S. travel and trade restrictions toward Cuba, allowing
Carnival, which touts itself as the world's largest cruise ship
operator, to apply and get permission from the U.S. government back in
July 2015.
The cruises
will be part of the thaw in relations between the United States and
Cuba after Obama and his Cuban counterpart Raul Castro decided to
reestablish ties in late 2014.
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