Amnesty International called on Sudan (Amnesty International) to hold all the security services that attacked protesters accountable during the protests that toppled the government of President Omar Hassan al-Bashir.

According to the report, Sudanese security forces have used excessive force to inflict maximum harm on protesters, committing grave human rights violations, including arbitrary mass detention of thousands of people, torture and other ill-treatment, and also raided hospitals, arresting medical personnel and patients, and beating them. .

An investigation by the organization found that Sudan's crackdown on protests in 2018 and 2019 included all branches of the country's security forces, and revealed new evidence on how to kill protesters.

Amnesty International documents in a new report, "They Descended upon Us Like the Rain" that how the police, national security and intelligence services and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces carried out deadly attacks against protesters at different times.

Many victims and their families have clearly identified specific weapons that security forces used mercilessly in attacking protesters.

The organization urged the transitional authorities in Sudan to conduct "comprehensive, effective and independent investigations" into all killings and other human rights violations suffered by protesters, especially from mid-December 2018 to 2 June 2019.