Sudanese police fired tear gas at demonstrators yesterday, just before the march of the parliament building in the city of Omdurman.

As teachers entered a week-long strike, the Democratic Alliance of Lawyers in Sudan announced that it and all lawyers and lawyers in Khartoum and various Sudanese states had been on strike in all courts in Sudan and all government agencies for two days.

In detail, Sudanese police yesterday fired tear gas at protesters ahead of a march towards the parliament building in Omdurman.

Demonstrators chanting "Freedom of Peace and Justice" in some neighborhoods of Omdurman before riot police fired tear gas, witnesses said, as protest organizers called for new anti-government marches.

The Union of Sudanese Professionals, which is leading the protest movement, called for new demonstrations over several days this week, starting with a march towards the parliament building.

"The protesters will submit a memorandum to the parliament calling on Bashir to step down," the union, representing unions of doctors, teachers and engineers, said in a statement. In conjunction with the march of the parliament went out in Khartoum and Omdurman other demonstrations, and witnessed the capital night demonstrations.

The statement said that next Thursday will see marches in all parts of Sudan.

The security forces deployed large numbers of their men in Khartoum and Omdurman, in preparation for new protests demanding reform changes.

Yesterday's protests came amidst a series of strikes announced by trade unions in Sudan, including the unions of doctors, teachers, lawyers and pharmacists.

"Sunday is a teachers' strike, your child is safe in your neck. We do not trust him in school," he said in a statement on his Twitter account. "It is a system that kills people and praises the sanctity of homes."

For its part, the Democratic Alliance of Lawyers in Sudan announced the entry of all lawyers and lawyers in Khartoum and the various states of Sudan in a strike in all the courts of Sudan and all government agencies for two days.

The coalition, according to the newspaper "Al-Jarida" Sudanese, said the strike begins today to continue to tomorrow.

The Democratic Alliance of Lawyers expressed its intention to present a memorandum to the Attorney General and the Chief Justice through a procession led by senior lawyers to demand the immediate release of all political prisoners and to launch criminal statements against former Vice President Ali Osman Taha and the ruling Congress Party leader Fatih Ezzeddine on charges of terrorism and incitement to murder. .

The coalition called on the Attorney General to form a commission of inquiry with the help of some lawyers and human rights activists to investigate the killing of citizens, storming their homes and intimidating their families.