Islamic State (IS) militants have again attacked an Iraqi Sunni tribe in western Anbar province, killing at least 50 people, tribal officials say.
Sunday's attack was the latest in a series of assaults on the Al-Bu Nimr tribe that Iraq's government says have killed 322 people.
The victims, including children, were lined up and shot as punishment for what IS sees at the tribe's resistance.
IS militants - also Sunnis - control large areas of Iraq and Syria.
A number of people from the Al-Bu Nimr tribe were also found dead in mass graves earlier this week. Fifty others were killed on Saturday.
The BBC's Orla Guerin, in Baghdad, says Sunday's mass killing is a stark warning to others about the price they may pay for resisting IS.
Winning the tribesThe latest shootings occurred in the village of Ras al-Maa, north of the provincial capital Ramadi.
A local official told the Associated Press news agency that many members of the tribe fled there from near the town of Hit, which was captured by IS last month.
The Al-Bu Nimr tribe had joined the Iraq government campaign against IS in Anbar, much of which is now under jihadist control.
The recently-formed and Shia-dominated Iraqi government is trying to win over Sunni tribes, which it sees as a key element in the fight against IS.
But Baghdad has not yet succeeded in persuading the bulk of the tribes to turn on IS.
The Associated Press reports that just 5,000 of an estimated 30-40,000-strong tribal population are backing the Baghdad government.
The tribes want guarantees that they will be given a serious degree of devolution for their areas and a real say in national decision-making, correspondents say.
Iraq tribe suffers new IS massacre
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