A group of Sudanese professionals called yesterday for the strike of teachers in the country and the organization of a procession from Omdurman towards the Parliament in conjunction with other processions in the processions and rallies organized by the assembly to demand the departure of President Omar al-Bashir. Pharmacists and dentists.

In a statement, the Sudanese teachers' committee called on teachers at all stages to carry out the strike and called on parents not to bring their children to school for their safety.

The Sudanese State Security Prosecution issued a red bullet to retrieve 28 journalists and online activists residing abroad, to be tried on charges including "incitement and defamation".

The prosecution said yesterday that Khartoum intends to pursue and retrieve 28 journalists and activists residing outside the country, under the articles of the Criminal Code and the law of informatics crimes, on charges of "incitement, public inconvenience, the dissemination of false news and defamation of natural and corporate figures, Sudanese.

On Sunday, Sudanese security services dispersed protests in different cities in Khartoum, including Berri, Al-Gharif West, Aldroushab, and the press. Witnesses said tear gas was fired to disperse protesters who returned from the graves to greet one of the protesters. The west also witnessed protests, but the authorities blocked their progress towards the famous 60th Street in Khartoum.

The spokesman of the police forces, General Hashim Mohammed Abdul Rahim, the death of two Sudanese citizens, one of them from his injury, at dawn Friday, categorically not to use the police to bullets in the dispersion of demonstrations, He explained in press statements, the evening the day before yesterday, that the goal of the police forces security and security of the homeland and the citizen.

Sudan's protests entered its first month, amid growing calls from trade unions and opposition groups to continue demonstrating despite the deaths of 26 people, according to a government statistic, and more than 40 dead according to the opposition.

"The victory of the Sudanese revolution, the transition to civil disobedience and the general strike, and the collapse of the security forces soon, if the protests continue," said the former deputy prime minister, Sudanese President Mubarak al-Fadhel al-Mahdi.

Mahdi said that the armed forces will take sides of the protesters, if the situation reached a stage that threatens the security and stability of the country, regardless of their political orientation.

"I do not think that the international situation allows intervention except in the context of Security Council resolutions, convictions of people and their submission to the International Criminal Court, and perhaps later comes to think of regional intervention if things go wrong," he said. Sudan in a direction that poses a threat to international peace and security. "