The Nigerian based militancy Islamist group Boko Haram has massacred 20 mourners returning from the burial of victims of an earlier attack by the jihadists in north-eastern Nigeria, police say.
The mourners died after their vehicle drove over an explosive device planted by the insurgents in Yobe state.
On Monday this week, the militants shot dead 17 people in a raid on Gurokayeya village.
Boko Haram orchestrated the attacks after the villagers refused to pay a so-called harvest tax, police said.
The militants have frequently been accused of extorting payments from residents in north-eastern Nigeria to fund their operations and to exert control over communities.
Yobe police spokesman Dungus Abdulkarim said that 10 members of the burial group died on the spot while another 10 died at a health centre where they were rushed to for treatment.
The incident occurred on Tuesday – a day after the deadly raid on Gurokayeya village.
The attacks are the first major assault that Boko Haram has waged in Yobe in more than a year.
State authorities said they suspected that the militants had arrived from neighbouring Borno state, where Boko Haram has carried out several attacks against civilians this year.
Much of Borno, the birthplace of Boko Haram, is still considered too dangerous to travel by road.
The group launched its insurgency in 2009, with aid agencies reporting that more than two million people have been displaced in the conflict.
The militant group has also extended its reach into neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, with government forces failing to defeat the group.
Boko Haram means “Western education is forbidden”, and it has repeatedly targeted secular schools as part of its attempts to establish its version of Islamic rule in the region.
The group gained notoriety internationally when it kidnapped more than 200 school girls from the north-eastern town of Chibok in 2014.