Toussaint Louverture International Airport (Tabarre)

Haiti / Ouest / Delmas / Tabarre / Boulevard Toussaint Louverture
 international airport  Add category

This is the international airport of Port-au-Prince, the capital and largest city of the Republic of Haiti. This is also the 3rd busiest airport in the Caribbean, behind the Santo Domingo and Havana airports. Toussaint Louverture International Airport is the principal airport in Haiti, receiving most of the air traffic of the country. It is slated for significant expansion and additional modernization in the very near future as Haiti develops its tourism industry.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates:   18°34'43"N   72°17'35"W

Comments

  • "..It (the POP airport) is slated for significant expansion and additional modernization in the very near future as Haiti develops its tourism inductry..." Oh, give me a break! Haiti developing something? Modernazing the airport? How they could come up with something like this when all they can do is fight among each other and steal from one another? They should start to work together for their own GOOD before any of this becomes to reality! It's just sad to watch one country to starve by their own hand. See the Dominican accross the border. Not a superior nation, but possibly a fine place to live. I think our dear Haitians are just missing an opportunity to live off of one tropical land. Why is it that up north where winter blocks your fields for most of the year, people intend to live better than down south where sun makes the crowth around the year and people could eat practically from a tree? Just for the record: I'm not trying to blame or mock up, just thinking out loud the sad situation of this one very poor country.
  • The good news is that with billions in aid being sent to haiti, they may actually modernize.
  • Extraordinary statement in its capacious ignorance. The USA, which has long controlled Haiti's history and destiny, continues to abuse this maligned country - to this very day.
This article was last modified 5 years ago