Gunmen dressed in military uniform stormed Tohya and Wurojene, 13 kilometres from Chibok, Borno state, late on Monday, opening fire on residents, burning homes and looting food stores.
"The attackers are obviously Boko Haram and came around 7:00 pm (1800 GMT)," Zamani Emma, a community leader in Tohya, told AFP.
"They opened fire on the two villages and threw petrol bombs into our homes, forcing us to flee into the bush.
Wurojene resident Mansur Ahmed gave a similar account and said the attackers came from the Sambisa forest, where Boko Haram has camps and which has been the focus of the hunt for the missing girls.
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At least 20 nomadic women were at the weekend kidnapped by suspected Boko Haram gunmen in nearby Garkin Fulani village and taken to an unknown location.
On Monday the Islamists took over Biita and Izghe villages -- also in Borno state -- in an apparent revenge attack against the military after scores of its fighters were killed.
"Boko Haram have take over Biita and Izghe after overwhelming soldiers," said Peter Makama, a resident of nearby Madagali, in neighbouring Adamawa state.
"The soldiers fled after Boko Haram launched a counter-offensive following a crushing defeat at the hands of the soldiers in fighting on Saturday and Sunday."
A military source in the Borno state capital, Maiduguri, confirmed the incident but claimed the soldiers had made a tactical withdrawal when faced with hundreds of militant fighters.
"Around 400 Boko Haram terrorists launched a counter-offensive on our troops on Monday after the heavy casualties they sustained in the military offensive at the weekend," the source said.
"We will re-strategise to re-take the two villages now occupied by the terrorists.