Suspected Daesh-linked militants beheaded more than 50 men and teenagers participating in a male initiation ceremony in Mozambique, local media says, in the latest violent incident in the insurgency-hit northeast.
The dismembered bodies were found on Monday, scattered across a forest clearing in Muidumbe district.
Radical militants operating in the area had attacked several nearby villages over the weekend, looting and burning down homes before retreating into surrounding thicket.
"Police learnt of the massacre committed by the insurgents through reports of people who found corpses in the woods," said an officer in the neighboring Mueda district who asked not to be named.
"It was possible to count 20 bodies spread over an area of about 500 meters," he added.
"These were young people who were at an initiation rite ceremony accompanied by their advisers."
An aid worker in Mueda, who also declined to be named, confirmed the massacre had taken place, saying some of the boys had come from that area.
She said body parts had been sent to their families for burial on Tuesday.
"Funerals were held in an environment of great pain," said the worker.
"The bodies were already decomposing and couldn't be shown to those present."
Extremists have caused havoc in Mozambique's northeastern Cabo Delgado province over the past three years, ravaging villages and towns as part of a campaign to establish a caliphate.
The militants have stepped up their offensive in recent months and violently seized swathes of territory, terrorizing citizens in the process.
In April, extremists shot dead and beheaded more than 50 youths for allegedly refusing to join their ranks.
The unrest has killed more than 2000 people since 2017, more than half of them civilians, according to the US-based Armed Conflict Location & Event Data group.
More than 400,000 others have been displaced by the conflict and sought refuge in nearby towns and cities.
Around 10,000 people fled to the provincial capital Pemba via boat over the past week alone, Doctors Without Borders said Tuesday, raising concerns over access to clean water and sanitation.
Little is known about Mozambique's extremists, who call themselves Al-Shabab - although they have no known links to the group of that name operating in Somalia.
Last year the militants pledged allegiance to Daesh.
(Source: AFP)