The Alliance of the Forces for Freedom and Change in Sudan accused the security services of trying to break up their sit-in in Khartoum by force and called on citizens to join them. Leaders of the Transitional Military Council met with opposition parties in the framework of its political consultations to transfer power to civilians.

The coalition warned of what it called attempts of "remnants of the former regime and its new version" to end the sit-in of the masses, which the forces described as a safety valve for the glorious revolution, calling on various groups of people in the neighborhoods of the capital and surrounding areas to march to the sit-in in front of the General Command of the Armed Forces.

About 40 military police asked them to remove the barriers from the entrances to the main road, but the protesters refused and continued their sit-in, which lasted 17 days, Matzmon said.

"The repressive apparatuses are trying to break the sit-ins from several directions, and we have noticed the movement of vehicles belonging to the security services," said the gathering of Sudanese professionals in a tweet on Twitter, adding that any attempt to break the sit-in would find a solution through the masses.

The group appealed to the opposition and all activists to come to the sit-in and to increase the barricades from the southern direction of the square.

The pictures showed activists moving crowds of the city of Atbara north of Khartoum on a train to the capital to join the sit-in.

On the other hand, the Transitional Military Council condemned the closure of road protesters and restricting the movement of citizens, saying that it is unacceptable "some young people to exercise the role of police and security services in clear violation of laws and regulations," referring to the young men searching protesters participating in the sit-in.

"We ask the honorable citizens to help remove these negative aspects that affect the life of the citizen and the security of the country," he said in a statement, calling for the opening of roads and immediate access to public transport.

Hamidati: The priority of the military council now is to agree with the political forces to the satisfaction of the Sudanese people (the island)

Military Council
Earlier in the day, Vice-President of the Transitional Military Council of Sudan, Lieutenant-General Mohamed Hamdan Daglo (Hamidati), discussed with a delegation of a new alliance called "Alliance for the Renaissance of Sudan" the demands and issues of the transitional period.

The leader of the Alliance Tijani Sisi, in a press statement that they conveyed to the Vice-President of the Council their vision, considering that the Sudan faces political polarization and regional and tribal acute may threaten the security and safety of the homeland and in an unlikely way "the Chaks and running behind power."


The coalition includes a group of parties: the Eastern Front, Liberation, National Justice, the United Nation, the Nation, the Nation of Reform and Development, the Sudan Liberation Movement, the Second Revolution and the Justice and Equality Movement.

Hamidati said during a meeting with a group of officers that the Council will not accept the "chaos in the country," and his mission is to reach Sudan to safety, adding that the priority of the Council now is to agree with political forces to the satisfaction of the Sudanese people.

For its part, called on the Muslim Brotherhood in Sudan, the military council to achieve consensus with all political components and the transfer of power to civilians at the earliest opportunity, and asked him to move away from the policy axes under the pressure of the economy and financial promises to safeguard the independence of the country's political decision.

The group said in a statement that it rejects the division of Sudanese into Islamists and secularists, and rejects the unilateral declaration of a government.