Halting peace negotiations have been dragging on between the central government and northern separatist groups for more than two years in an effort to end the disputes that turned large sections of the country into haven for radical Islamic militants.
The talks have shown some promise in recent months and the Radisson Blu hotel attacked by two gunmen on Friday had been set to host a meeting on implementing the latest accords.
"The jihadis are in different groups but their goal is the same, and that's to hinder implementation of the peace accord," Sidati said.
It was the secular separatist groups that first wrested northern Mali from the government in 2012, using weapons looted from arsenals in neighboring Libya, but they were soon overtaken by al-Qaida-allied radicals.
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In 2013, the French pushed the Islamist extremists to the fringes of the vast Sahara though they continue to carry out attacks on UN peacekeepers and even in the capital itself.
The hotel attack was claimed by the Al-Mourabitoun (The Sentinels) radical group which has links to al-Qaida and it said attacks would continue until the government ended its "aggression against our people in the north and the center of Mali."
The attack began at around 7 a.M. Friday morning, when two gunmen armed with assault rifles and explosives attacked just as guards who had worked the night shift were preparing to hand over to a new team.
Malian troops backed by French and American forces then assaulted the hotel in a siege lasting more than seven hours that involved clearing the building floor by floor.
The timing of the attack suggested a well-planned operation that analysts said could have been an attempt by al-Qaida and its Al-Mourabitoun allies to assert its relevance amid high-profile assaults by the rival Islamic State group, including the Nov. 13 attacks on Paris that killed 130 people.