A coalition of freedom and change forces organized protests in Sudan on Tuesday called for a "two million convoy" on Thursday to demand civil administration, saying the transitional military junta was "not serious about transferring power" after accusing it of "freedom and change" by jumping on unanswered demands.

"We call upon the masses of our people to conduct a two million march on the second of May, to affirm our basic demand for civil authority," the coalition said in a statement.

The leader of the Alliance for Freedom and Change, who leads the protests in Sudan, Mohammed Naji al-Asam, said that the transitional military council is "not serious" in handing over power to civilians ... and insists that the (sovereign) council be militarily represented by civilians.

"The military council is extending its authority every day and this is a very serious threat to the Sudanese revolution," he told a news conference in Khartoum.

"What we feel from all the actions of the junta until the moment is that it is not serious about handing over power to civilians and that it is extending its powers, exploiting the factor of time," said a spokesman for the Sudanese Workers' Union.

He pointed out that «did not hold the meeting today (Tuesday) but within hours we will provide our vision for the three levels of power and expect to respond quickly».

Al-Aseem criticized the military council's demand to open some roads and bridges near the sit-in area in front of the army headquarters.

"It makes no sense to talk that you do not want to break the sit-in and want to remove roadblocks and open roads," he said.

This comes after the Vice President of the Military Council, Mohammad Hamdan Douqlo, nicknamed «Hamidati», in a press conference held in Khartoum today, that «will not allow chaos after today», pointing out that there are acts of sabotage and killing carried out by unregulated people in Sudanese areas Miscellaneous.

Hamidati stressed the commitment of the military council «to negotiate with the delegation of the forces of freedom and change, but no chaos after today».

Hamidi pointed out that incursions into the presidential palace and the headquarters of the Sudanese army in the center of Khartoum, revealing the killing of six and wounding 16 of the regular forces during the last period due to security chaos by citizens, as well as the burning of a market in the state of Blue Nile in the south of the country.

He stressed the need to open roads and bridges closed by protesters, as well as the flow of traffic, saying: «patience limits, and I can not leave a citizen to take his right hand».

Hamidati stressed the commitment not to break the sit-in by force and to provide aids to stay longer as a popular right, adding: "We want a Sudanese youth revolution without an agenda."

Hamidati criticized the negotiating delegation for the forces of freedom and change and accused them of jumping on demands not agreed, noting that there is no agreement with the forces of change with the participation of civilians in the military council.

The military council demanded the negotiating team for the forces of freedom and change to obtain a mandate or to change the negotiating team to take responsibility for any agreement reached, pointing to the weakness of the negotiating delegation and its retreat from the agreements that are taking place within the joint committees.

A spokesman for the military council, Shamseddin Kabbashi, said he had reached an agreement with the Freedom and Change Committee to negotiate the opening of roads and the flow of trains through a joint committee.

The military council also announced the resignation of three of its members. The first group was Omar Zine El Abidine, chairman of the Political Committee of the Majlis, and the other two were Maj. Gen. Jalaluddin al-Shaykh al-Tayeb and the first police chief, Tayeb Babeker, after the forces of freedom and change objected to their presence in the council.