Audio By Carbonatix
Captain Paul Fordjour, lead investigator of the August 6 helicopter crash during the official presentation of findings, has detailed the extensive methodology used to investigate the tragic incident that claimed the lives of eight passengers, including government ministers and senior officials.
“The Preliminary Investigation Team was dispatched on the same day of the accident to secure the site and protect perishable evidence such as memories, physical wreckage, and personal effects,” Captain Fordjour told the media, explaining the first critical steps taken by the investigation team.
The crash involved a Harbin Z-9EH military helicopter (tail number GHF 631) operated by the Ghana Air Force, which departed Accra at about 9:12 a.m. en route to Obuasi in the Ashanti Region for an anti-illegal mining operation when it lost radar contact in the Adansi Akrofuom District.
All eight passengers and crew on board were killed, including Dr. Edward Omane Boamah, Minister for Defence; Ibrahim Murtala Muhammed, Minister for Environment, Science and Technology; Muniru Mohammed Limuna, Acting Deputy National Security Coordinator; Samuel Sarpong, NDC Vice-Chair; Samuel Aboagye, former parliamentary candidate; Squadron Leader Peter Bafemi Anala; Flying Officer Manaen Twum Ampadu; and Sergeant Ernest Addo Mensah.
Captain Fordjour said the investigation board was composed of personnel from the National Security, the Ghana Armed Forces, the Aircraft Accident and Incident Investigation and Prevention Bureau, the National Intelligence Bureau, and U.S. Air Force advisors.
The team collected and analysed all available factual information, including flight logs, aircraft maintenance records, crew qualifications, and documentation.
The flight data recorder and cockpit voice recorder—commonly known as the black box—were sent to the AVIC Flight Decoding Centre in Xi’an, China, from September 12 to 22, 2025, to extract and interpret data from the Chinese-made aircraft.
Beyond technical analysis, the investigation also assessed human factors and operational procedures. Medical and psychological records of the flight crew were reviewed, and interviews were conducted with pilots, engineers, supervisors, and family members to gauge proficiency, training, and operational culture. Weather conditions on the day of the crash were evaluated using Ghana Meteorological Agency data, Terminal Aerodrome Forecasts (TAFs), and eyewitness accounts.
Captain Fordjour further explained that the team examined Ghana Air Force policies, flight orders, operational oversight mechanisms, and risk management systems to understand the organisational environment in which the helicopter was operated. This included reviewing the air tasking order for the day, which involved transporting the Minister of Defence and his entourage from Accra to Obuasi and back.
“Using flight recorder data, radar tracks, eyewitness accounts, and analysis of similar accidents, we reconstructed the flight path to understand what led to this tragedy,” Captain Fordjour said, emphasising that no detail was overlooked.
Latest Stories
-
Police hunt gunmen after fatal robbery attack on Mobile Money vendor
39 minutes -
Speaker Alban Bagbin donates 16,584 uniforms, commissions two classrooms at Nadowli-Kaleo
59 minutes -
Sweety Aborchie Writes: The Half-Built Staircase, Women, Power, Politics (Issue 4)
1 hour -
See the areas that will be affected by ECG’s planned maintenance on Tuesday, June 9
1 hour -
KMA orders immediate evacuation ahead of Santasi-Asokwa Interchange construction
1 hour -
I’ll be the first Ashanti Regional Chairman to become NPP National Chairman – Wontumi
2 hours -
I’m willing to sacrifice everything for NPP’s 2028 victory – Wontumi
2 hours -
I had to tell my children we’re renovating the house – Father reveals after court-ordered eviction displaces his family
2 hours -
GES releases Academic Intervention Fund for schools
2 hours -
Canada issues strict food import rules ahead of FIFA World Cup 2026
2 hours -
No one can campaign more than me – Wontumi declares readiness to unite and lead NPP
2 hours -
Permit audit step in right direction but not enough – Structural engineer
2 hours -
‘We want power, not English lessons’ – Chairman Wontumi
2 hours -
Kotoko appoint former Dutch goalkeeper Stanley Menzo as Technical Director
2 hours -
Wontumi says challenges have prepared him to lead NPP to victory
2 hours