A counter-terrorism operation by Nigerian troops has led to the arrest of a suspected Moroccan member of the Islamic State (ISIS), following the military’s successful repulsion of a terrorist attack on Cross Kauwa in Kukawa Local Government Area of Borno State.
Security sources said the operation began after troops thwarted a coordinated assault by insurgents, compelling the attackers to flee while abandoning weapons, communications equipment and other operational materials.
The military immediately launched follow-up search and exploitation missions across the terrorists’ withdrawal routes, recovering additional intelligence assets believed to have been discarded during the escape.
Among the recovered items were high-frequency handheld radios and other communication devices considered crucial to the group’s operational network.
Intelligence generated from the recovered materials enabled troops to expand the operation into the Lake Chad Islands and Abadam axis, where the fleeing foreign suspect was eventually intercepted and arrested.
According to military sources, the suspect had already been identified during an earlier intelligence review involving international security partners. His identity reportedly emerged after forensic analysts examined video footage extracted from a camcorder recovered from a terrorist killed during the failed Cross Kauwa attack.
The sources explained that terrorist organisations routinely deploy media personnel alongside combat fighters to record attacks for propaganda, recruitment and operational evaluation.
Investigators believe the recovered footage provided critical clues that helped establish the suspect’s identity before his eventual capture.
The suspect has since been airlifted by the Nigerian Air Force to a secure military facility, where he is undergoing intensive interrogation and intelligence analysis.
Security agencies are expected to determine his role within the terrorist network, trace how he entered Nigeria, establish his links to the Islamic State’s international structure and ascertain whether he participated in planning attacks, training fighters or producing propaganda for the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP).
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