Parliament members from the Minority Caucus want answers about two private planes that supposedly carried drugs and money through Ghana. They held a press briefing led by Assin South MP Reverend John Ntim Fordjour, who used to serve as Deputy Education Minister. The planes landed at Kotoka International Airport last month, raising serious questions about what they brought into the country.
The Minority group claims these aircraft flew from Grand Canaria, Spain, a place known for drug smuggling. They asked National Security officials to tell the public exactly what came into Ghana on these flights. The planes were identified as Air Med Flight N823AM and Cavok Air Antonov 12B, both arriving in March 2025 before flying back to Spain days later.
According to Fordjour, the Air Med Flight was supposed to be an ambulance plane that transports sick patients. It landed March 20 but stayed for five days without any record showing it moved any patients. Their sources confirmed that nobody received medical transport on this flight coming to or leaving Ghana. No medical paperwork exists for anyone traveling on the plane.
The second aircraft, Cavok Air Antonov 12B, touched down on March 12 from Grand Canaria. This private jet remained parked for 13 days before taking off at 6:40 in the morning on March 25. The Minority found it strange that both planes left for Grand Canaria on the same day. They questioned what these planes carried back to Spain, an area famous for drug deals and money laundering operations. Reverend Fordjour stressed that National Security must reveal what these planes carried when they arrived and when they departed.
The Minority group claims these aircraft flew from Grand Canaria, Spain, a place known for drug smuggling. They asked National Security officials to tell the public exactly what came into Ghana on these flights. The planes were identified as Air Med Flight N823AM and Cavok Air Antonov 12B, both arriving in March 2025 before flying back to Spain days later.
According to Fordjour, the Air Med Flight was supposed to be an ambulance plane that transports sick patients. It landed March 20 but stayed for five days without any record showing it moved any patients. Their sources confirmed that nobody received medical transport on this flight coming to or leaving Ghana. No medical paperwork exists for anyone traveling on the plane.
The second aircraft, Cavok Air Antonov 12B, touched down on March 12 from Grand Canaria. This private jet remained parked for 13 days before taking off at 6:40 in the morning on March 25. The Minority found it strange that both planes left for Grand Canaria on the same day. They questioned what these planes carried back to Spain, an area famous for drug deals and money laundering operations. Reverend Fordjour stressed that National Security must reveal what these planes carried when they arrived and when they departed.