Corpses have been loaded onto a  truck and women have tried to block  the smell of decay while  fleeing Zonkwa in northern Nigeria, as  government officials say  next week's governor elections in two state  cannot go ahead because  of the violence.
Witnesses said hundreds were killed in Zonkwa alone after  Saturday's  election which unleashed waves of killings in  communities across  Nigeria's mostly Muslim north after the  Christian president won the  vote.
Authorities had been reluctant to release a death toll for fear  of  sparking more fighting, but an Associated Press tour of rural  eastern  Kaduna state with military leaders on Thursday showed  violence far  beyond what federal authorities seemed willing to  acknowledge.
In a town near Zonkwa, children raised their hands above their  heads  as a military convoy carrying soldiers passed, fearful of  being shot  at by the machine guns mounted on the back. One broken  cinderblock wall  in the area bore a single word in white paint:  "War".
Attahiru Jega, chief of Nigeria's Independent Election  Commission,  announced on Thursday that polls could not go ahead as  scheduled in  Kaduna or in neighbouring Bauchi state because of  security concerns,  and that the votes in those states would be  delayed by two days.
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