Monday, April 13, 2026 - Troops of Operation Hadin Kai (OPHK) have arrested a 15-year-old suspected Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP) logistics courier in Ngamdu, Borno, linking him to recent terrorist attacks and ongoing military airstrikes on insurgent enclaves in the Jilli axis.
Security sources told Zagazola Makama that the suspect,
identified as Tijjani, was apprehended on Sunday, April 12, 2026 while
allegedly attempting to procure logistics for insurgent fighters operating
within the Ngamdu–Benisheik corridor.
According to the publication, the suspect confessed during
preliminary interrogation that he participated in the attacks on Benisheik and
Ngamdu carried out on Thursday.
“My name is Tijjani, I am 15 years old. I was arrested
today in Ngamdu. I was among the terrorists that attacked Benisheik and
Ngamdu,” the suspect said.
He reportedly disclosed that the group mobilised from Jilli,
a known insurgent stronghold in Gubio Local Government Area, before executing
the attacks and subsequently returned to the enclave.
“Before the attack we came from Jilli and returned there
after the attack,” he said.
The suspect further revealed that he was redeployed from
Jilli on Saturday with the sum of N850,000 to procure supplies for other
fighters.
“I was sent from Jilli yesterday with N850,000 to collect
some logistics from Ngamdu, but I was arrested by troops,” he stated.
He added that he left behind other fighters at the Jilli
enclave but could not confirm their fate following the recent military
airstrikes on the area.
“I left my colleagues at Jilli yesterday. I don’t know what
has happened to them there,” he said
Military sources said the arrest of the suspect provides
further insight into the operational and logistics network of ISWAP within the
region, particularly the central role of Jilli as a staging ground and supply
hub.
The development comes barely 24 hours after the Air
Component of OPHK conducted precision airstrikes on the Jilli axis, destroying
a major terrorist logistics base and neutralising scores of insurgents.
The strikes, which followed sustained Intelligence,
Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) missions, targeted a convergence of
motorcycles and vehicles identified as belonging to insurgents and their
logistics handlers.
Field reports indicated that at least two motorcycles and
one vehicle were destroyed, while several terrorists were killed in the
operation.
Some insurgents were said to have taken cover upon hearing
the approaching aircraft but later returned in the evening to evacuate
casualties.
Military authorities have consistently described Jilli as a
“no man’s land” under insurgent control, where activities such as the so-called
weekly market serve as logistics and coordination points for terrorist
operations.
The arrest of the teenage suspect, who admitted to moving
funds and facilitating supplies, underscores the reliance of insurgent groups
on logistics couriers, including minors, to sustain their operations.

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