Audio By Carbonatix
JoyNews has confirmed that AirMed Flight N823AM landed in Ghana and stayed at the Kotoka International Airport (KIA) for five days before departing for Gran Canaria, Spain.
This follows concerns raised by the Minority in Parliament regarding the aircraft’s activities in the country.
Ranking Member on Parliament’s Defense and Interior Committee, Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, alleged that the air ambulance and another private jet may have been involved in drug trafficking or money laundering, a claim Joy News cannot independently confirm.
Checks on FlightRadar24, a trusted flight tracking platform, confirm that AirMed N823AM was originally scheduled to depart Gran Canaria on March 20, 2025, at 3:55 AM, and arrive in Accra at 8:08 AM.
However, it was delayed and eventually departed at 4:59 AM, landing in Accra at 9:03 AM.
The aircraft stayed in Ghana for five days before departing Kotoka International Airport on March 25, 2025, at 1:01 AM, and landing in Gran Canaria at 5:12 AM.
Since then, it has completed fifteen flights, including trips to Santa Maria, St. John’s, Bangor, and Birmingham on the same day, March 25.
In the last seven days, the aircraft has also flown to Nigeria. On March 28, it traveled from Gran Canaria to Lagos, Nigeria, and back on the same day.
Its most recent flight was on March 30, 2025, when it flew from Charlotte to Birmingham.
According to the Minority, AirMed flight N823AM, an air ambulance, did not transport any patients but allegedly carried suspicious cargo suspected to contain cocaine and US dollars.
“There is no evidence of any medical referral or patient on board. Rather, our intelligence suggests that the aircraft was used to smuggle illicit cargo,” the Minority stated.
They further raised concerns about Cavok Air’s Antonov An-12B, which landed on 12th March and remained in Ghana for thirteen days before departing on the same day as the AirMed flight.
The Minority's Ranking Member of the Defence and Interior Committee, Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, described the coincidence as “intriguing” and called for a full disclosure of the cargo transported.
“In our collective quest to combat drug trafficking and money laundering, transparency must be upheld. We urge National Security to provide details of the cargo brought into and taken out of the country by these two aircraft,” the Minority demanded.
The call follows a recent interception of $350 million worth of cocaine in Cape Coast by the National Investigations Bureau, an operation the Minority praised for its transparency.
Following the claims by the Minority, President John Mahama has directed the National Security and relevant authorities to conduct a full-scale investigation.
Read Also: Minority raises alarm over suspicious flights linked to drug trafficking
Latest Stories
-
53 seconds -
Parents of Persons with Disabilities call for affordable rehabilitation services
6 minutes -
Barker-Vormawor urges President Mahama to lead constitutional reform implementation
11 minutes -
Dr Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe calls for abolition of ex gratia payments, excessive benefits for public officeholders
24 minutes -
Dr Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe backs review of presidential immunity provisions in Ghana’s constitution
37 minutes -
Dr Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe opposes presidential term extension
1 hour -
Dr Nyaho Nyaho-Tamakloe: On Ghana’s constitution review and the future of democratic governance
1 hour -
Victoria Bright supports lowering presidential age limit to 30
2 hours -
Where Rain Falls but Water Dies
2 hours -
Christmas Embrace: Sametro Group honours 250 widows in Tarkwa with gifts
2 hours -
Victoria Bright: Weak institutions make presidential term extension risky
2 hours -
Police net 120 suspects in major East Legon drug and crime swoop
2 hours -
Three suspected armed robbers shot dead by Police in Ashanti region
3 hours -
Why Ghana’s Constitution Review Committee’s Work Should Be Extended to Strategic Communication
3 hours -
Prof. Prempeh defends lowering presidential age, cites Kufuor’s early leadership roles
3 hours
