The Alliance of the Forces for Freedom and Change in Sudan announced that it formed a delegation to negotiate with the Transitional Military Council, while the protests continued demanding the handover of power to the civilians and the return of the military to their barracks.

The delegation of freedom and change forces includes 12 members, most notably Omar al-Dukair, Ali al-Rayah al-Senhuri, Maryam al-Sadiq al-Mahdi, al-Sadiq Yusuf and Muhammad Naji al-Asem, as well as three other figures representing the armed movements whose names have not yet been identified.

The coalition demanded the military council to be at one distance from the various political forces.

In the sit-in in front of the General Command of the Sudanese army, the rebels stressed their commitment to hand over power to civilians, and demanded the army to devote full security and protect the border.

The demonstrators stressed that they continue to sit in the sit-in until the start of real and real steps to hand over the military junta to power.

A spokesman for the military council, Shams al-Din Kabbashi, said that the Political Committee of the Council completed the study of visions provided by the political and youth forces on the arrangements for the transitional period.

The Board confirmed its readiness to present the results of the study in the meeting, which will be arranged later.

Kabbashi added that dialogue with the forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change and the components of the Sudanese people has come a long way.

He stressed that the sit-in before the General Command of the Sudanese army a legitimate right and the choice of the detainees estimated by the Military Council.

In a related context, the gathering of Sudanese professionals - one of the components of the alliance of the forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change - that there is a broad agreement not to participate in the transitional government expected.

The group of professionals leading the movement said that these forces will leave the field to form a government of national competencies to manage the stage.

Thousands of Sudanese participated in Friday prayers at the sit-in outside the army headquarters to continue pressure on the junta and push it to give up power.

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We do not want the military
The mother of worshipers Mattar Yunus, a 49-year-old blind cleric from the Darfur region, was repeatedly imprisoned under Bashir.

"We call for a democratic civil state, we reject the rule of the military, the role of the military to protect the country, not the rule of the country," Yunus said.

After they finished praying, the protesters chanted "civil, civilian," referring to their demands for a civil order.

"People in the revolution died, were imprisoned and tortured for democracy, not for military rule," said accountant Mahjoub Bouchra, who accompanied his two children to the protest site. "We will defend democracy and reject the rule of the military."

Large numbers of protesters rallied Thursday outside the army headquarters to demand a civilian rule, in defiance of the military junta.

This came after the military council announced that it would retain sovereign power only, and that civilians would assume the premiership and all government ministries.

It is noteworthy that the Sudanese army dismissed President Omar al-Bashir on the 11th of this month, the impact of popular demonstrations to protest against the low economic conditions and high prices and the spread of corruption.