CONFIRMED! Suspicious ‘Concaine’ AirMed Plane Stayed In Ghana For 5 Days
Confirmed reports reaching Ghmessenger indicate 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 revelation comes following concerns raised by the Minority in Parliament regarding the aircraft’s activities in Ghana.
Background
The former Deputy Minister of Education and current Member of Parliament for Assin South, Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, called for full transparency from National Security regarding two flights that landed in Ghana in early March and departed for Gran Canaria, a Spanish island, on March 25.
The flights, an air ambulance and a private jet, according to him, touched down on Ghana’s soil for days before their departure.
The Minority were utterly concerned with the purpose of the aircraft in Ghana.
“We have provided the registration numbers and the details of these two aircraft. We have even provided information regarding when they landed on the tarmac and when they departed”, Mr. Fordjour, on behalf of the Minority, said at a press conference on Tuesday, April 1.
He called for accountability saying “it is crucial that we uphold the principle of transparency in every matter of governance”.
Confirmation Of Report
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.
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.
These checks were disclosed in a publication by Joy News on Tuesday, April 2.
Suspected Narcotics
According to the Minority’s account, AirMed flight N823AM which is an air ambulance didn’t transport patients but allegedly carried cargo suspected to contain cocaine and US dollars for money laundering purposes.
“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 averred.
They earnestly demanded that “in our collective quest to combat drug trafficking and money laundering, transparency must be upheld”, therefore urged the “National Security to provide details of the cargo brought into and taken out of the country by these two aircraft”.
Source: Ghmessenger.com