Al Jazeera Net - Private

Under the pressure of the street and video footage of how the Dushka gun was killing students in al-Abid, the capital of North Kordofan state, the military junta in power in Sudan had to admit that elements of the rapid support force were involved in the incident.

The street reacted quickly on Monday when demonstrations broke out in several areas in Khartoum and in the city of Wad Madani, the capital of the central state of the island, condemning the killing of the protesting students and demanding the killing of the killers.

On Tuesday morning, most of the country's cities saw parades of secondary school students, which continued on Wednesday despite the suspension of the study in all states and the lack of schedules of demonstrations by the forces of the declaration of freedom and change as usual.

The march of millions of "fair punishment" - called by the forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change Thursday noon - was a clear referendum for the impatience of the street towards the repetition of deadly excesses involving the rapid support forces led by Vice-President Mohammad Hamdan Humaidti, military observers say.

White Curse
The White incident was the third of its kind involving rapid support forces within two weeks after the Suki incidents in Sennar and Al-Dain states in the state of East Darfur on 15 and 16 July, and the share of these forces in the three areas either expulsion or withdrawal, Escape as happened in the past.

For the second time, the rapid support forces lost ground in the state of North Kordofan. In April 2014, the governor of the state, Ahmed Haroun, succeeded in removing the troops from the city of Abyad after demonstrations condemning acts of murder and looting involving those forces classified as combat troops.

Days after a sit-in in front of the army's general command in Khartoum last April, the rapid support force deployed in Khartoum and most of the country's cities, raising questions about the army's absence.

Absence of the army
Just as questions are asked about the army's absence, keeping the police out of their jobs on the city streets remains the most important question, which was part of the conditions of freedom and change forces to return to negotiations after the sit-in on June 3.

A member of the negotiations team for the forces of freedom and change Bakir Faisal to Al Jazeera Net that their team has remained in all negotiating sessions demanding the removal of manifestations of militarization in the cities.

Faisal explained that the military excesses were repeated and involving all the military forces (the rapid support, the army and the security apparatus).

Faysal, a leader of the opposition federal assembly, said the military council had been quoted as saying that security assessments were behind the military forces' presence in the cities and had committed to withdrawing them gradually. This was especially the case in Khartoum, but the forces themselves appeared with marches and demonstrations.

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The priority of authority
In the opinion of Faisal that the recognition, as happened by the Military Council in the events of the White is not enough alone, and must be investigated and held public trials, and the imposition of deterrent penalties for those involved in this incident and others, where the attack on 8 Ramadan on the perimeter of the sit-in, Break the sit-in.

Faisal was part of a delegation of the Declaration of Freedom and Change arrived in the state of North Kordofan condolences in the deaths of the events of the White, which killed six people.

On the next step in the face of repeated abuses of military elements, he says that priority must be to proceed to receive power.

Faisal pointed out that the prime minister will be under his command the ministers of defense and interior, and can quickly restore the police presence of the streets, and continues, "This is a priority now, which is better than being out of power and onlookers."

Direct charge
The Alliance of Forces for Freedom and Change - which negotiates the military junta for the transfer of power - did not hesitate to accuse army forces and quick support Monday afternoon of firing indiscriminately and violently at peaceful demonstrations of high school students in white.

This may be due to the fact that videos on the social media platforms were relatively clear, showing a force of rapid support near a bank, firing its machine guns and a heavy artillery on a truck towards the students.

Shortly after the incident, the military governor of North Kordofan state that the center of the city was empty of security forces during the secondary students' demonstration. He then announced the formation of a commission of inquiry rejected by the gathering of Sudanese professionals on the grounds that the evidence on those involved was clear.

As a result, the security committee in the military council revealed Wednesday evening the arrest of 7 members of the rapid support forces who shot at demonstrators in the city of Al-Abyad.

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Extensive condemnation
The White incident was widely condemned and clearly explained the growing state of rupture between Hamditi's forces and the Sudanese who are almost oblivious to their sorrow until their grief is restored by quick support.

In a press conference on Wednesday, the Communist Party called for the dissolution of the "security and intelligence services and all militias, including the rapid support forces."

The party stressed its refusal to absorb the forces of the Operations Force (combat force) of the security apparatus in the rapid support forces within the restructuring of the apparatus, which changed its name to the "General Intelligence Service."

The Sudanese national and Sudanese parties condemned the events, and the military council blamed the events.

Both the National Congress (former ruling party) and the People's Congress held the Military Council responsible for the events in Al-Abyad city and called for a speedy investigation that would bring the perpetrators to justice and accountability.

The African envoy to the Sudan, Mohamed El Hassan Labbat, condemned the killing of the students in Al-Abyad. He called on the African Union to bring the perpetrators to justice, and the representative of the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) in Sudan, Abdullah Fadel, expressed his deep shock at the shooting of the students.

The recurrence of excesses involving self-supporting forces opens questions about the qualification and training of their forces and the fate of these forces in the future of the regular forces in Sudan.