KHARTOUM - Sudanese government aircraft bombed a rebel-held town in Darfur on Monday, insurgent groups said, hours after the government said it was investigating a bloody rebel raid on one of its bases last month.
Reports of the attack came seven weeks before rebel groups and the Khartoum government are set to meet for peace talks, and coincided with renewed calls from the United Nations for the two sides to cease hostilities and prepare for the arrival of a 26,000-strong force of U.N./African Union peacekeepers.
Abu-Bakr Mohammed Kadu, a field commander in the Sudanese Liberation Army's Unity (SLA-Unity) faction, said government Antonov planes and helicopter gunships attacked Haskanita, and then ground forces entered the town in north Darfur from just after 3 p.m. local time (1200 GMT).
Abdel Aziz el-Nur Ashr, from the rebel Justice and Equality Movement (JEM) which also has forces in the town, said rebels had fought off the ground attack after three hours.
"We have captured 50 government troops and a Brigadier," he told Reuters. "The government is just interested in pushing us out of our areas. It is not interested in peace talks."
Abdel Aziz added that seven fighters from the joint JEM/SLA-Unity force had died in the attack. "We still do not know the number of civilian casualties," he added.
Sudanese military officials were not available for comment.
A spokesman for the African Union, which has a small force of peacekeepers in Haskanita, confirmed he had received reports of fighting in the town, although the details still had to be checked by officers.
It was not clear whether the attack was in retaliation for a raid by the SLA-Unity and JEM on a government base just over 200 km (125 miles) east of Haskanita at the end of August.
The justice ministry said on Monday it had launched an inquiry into six JEM members it suspects masterminded the attack that killed 41 people at the government base in the town of Wad Banda in the Kordofan region across the border from Darfur.










