Ghana Link Network Services Ltd has dismissed media reports suggesting that six of 18 transit trucks went missing following a recent enforcement operation, insisting that all the vehicles were properly tracked and physically verified.
In a press release dated Friday, February 20, 2026, the company said its electronic tracking system and field teams had confirmed the locations of all trucks linked to Bill of Entry (BOE) 80226125039.
According to the company, the six trucks described in some reports as missing were never lost to its monitoring platform.
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Ghana Link said its field officers visited the locations and physically confirmed the presence of the trucks before submitting a report to the Customs Division.
“The six trucks earlier described as missing were not missing to the tracking platform. Our field team physically confirmed their locations and transmitted the information to Customs,” the statement said.
The company explained that the confusion arose after authorities directed 11 of the trucks to move to the Tema Customs Transit Yard for further checks.
Because the facility is outside the declared transit corridor, the tracking system triggered a route deviation alert.
“This should be understood as an enforcement-led diversion for control purposes, not evidence that trucks had disappeared,” Ghana Link clarified.
It disclosed that the previously flagged trucks were located and verified at the following places:
• Two trucks at Aflao
• Two trucks at Accra Toll Booth
• One truck at West Point Filling Station, Tsopoli
• One truck at Galaxy Filling Station, Dowenya
• One truck at Akranu
All locations, the company said, were shared with customs authorities for further action.
The tracking firm reaffirmed its commitment to cooperating fully with state agencies investigating possible breaches of transit regulations.
It said it continues to work closely with the Ghana Revenue Authority, its Customs Division, and National Security.
“We recognise the seriousness of suspected breaches of the transit regime, and we fully support lawful investigations by the Ghana Revenue Authority and relevant state agencies,” the statement noted.
Ghana Link stressed that its monitoring systems are designed to provide accurate, real-time visibility over transit movements and that its playback data accounted for all the trucks, including those earlier described as missing.
“Our tracking systems are built to replace uncertainty with evidence. In this case, the playback accounted for all trucks under the BOE,” the firm stated.
The company reaffirmed its commitment to supporting government revenue mobilisation and trade facilitation through modern tracking technology.

