Boko Haram militants have killed dozens of people in fresh attacks on villages in Borno state in northern Nigeria, the BBC has learnt.
In one attack, gunmen reportedly fired on a crowd in a church compound.
Boko Haram has waged an increasingly bloody insurgency since 2009 to create an Islamic state in Nigeria.
The latest attacks come as the Nigerian army has denied reports that several generals have been found guilty of aiding Boko Haram in their insurgency.
Nigerian media reported on Tuesday that 10 generals and five other senior military officers had been tried before a court martial for supplying arms and information to the militant group.
However, a military spokesman called the reports “falsehoods”.
This contradicted an earlier statement by the interior minister, Abba Moro, saying it was “good news” that the army had identified the accused, and that it sent a strong message to other serving officers.
State of emergency
Nigerian media said the latest attacks happened on Tuesday in Borno state.
Residents in the village of Attagara, close to the Cameroonian border, said that armed men had ordered them into a church compound.
They said they were led to believe the men were from the Nigerian military. Eyewitnesses said the men then opened fire on the crowd.
Nigerian media report that at least six villages were raided and 30 people killed.
Nigerian MP Peter Biye told the BBC there had been several similar raids in the area and that many homes had been destroyed.
Credit: BBC