The Security Council deplored the fact that the attack took place only weeks before a new round of Darfur peace talks scheduled for October 27 in Tripoli, Libya. It said that "any attempt to undermine the peace process is unacceptable."
Sudan's U.N. ambassador Abdalmahmood Abdalhaleem Mohamad told reporters sanctions would have to be lodged against the rebels, which U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad has also suggested.
Mohamad said the rebels had to be taught a lesson as one of their objectives was "to reserve a seat on the train of peace" in the Tripoli talks. But "they are just criminals."
In Khartoum, Sudanese Justice Minister Ali al-Mardi told Reuters the United States and the European Union should have punished the rebel groups that have refused to sign peace deals with the government to end the four-year conflict.
"What happened in Haskanita is a direct result of what the international community has failed to do," he said. "If they had exerted pressure on them, this attack would not have happened."
The under-financed and ill-equipped African Union troops are to be absorbed and augmented by a joint AU-United Nations force of up to 26,000 soldiers and police.
But the United Nations and the AU have been in dispute over the composition of the force, with the AU backing Sudan in wanting all African troops. At the same time Western countries have not offered enough specialists, concerned in part over the muddy command structure.
Sudan's Mohamad said such criticism was aimed at discrediting "African participation in the force as well as to send a message that Africans are not capable of doing that."
He said African countries also had specialized units and pointed to an offer from Egypt of 3,000 troops, adding that "nobody can dispute the competence of its soldiers."

















