Al Jazeera Net - Khartoum

The end of the signing ceremony was the initials of Sudan's constitutional declaration document with the timing of the revolted revolutionaries "at one o'clock the revolution time", filling the streets as they used to for seven months.

At 12 noon Sudan time, the military junta and the forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change signed a constitutional document that would govern the country for three years and establish a transition of power and access to general elections.

As soon as the signing ceremony ended, dozens of revolutionaries flocked to the inner courtyard of the Friendship Hall overlooking the Nile Road carrying Sudanese flags. Peace and justice .. civil choice of the people. "

And rushed into the hall to get out of them and docking dozens of rebels who poured into the Friendship Hall where the signing ceremony took place.

Copper drums
In the neighborhoods that have been fueling protests since the revolution broke out in December, citizens have been keen to take to the streets, raising flags and chanting slogans of power.

Thawar drove out in Al-Ayad Street in the Shambat neighborhood of Khartoum with the drums of "copper" and chanted it in the midst of the songs of joy and singing of women.

Copper is a drum set knocking on sticks used by Sudanese for hundreds of years to mobilize for war or to warn against speeches.

Abeer, a five-year-old woman, said she was happy despite the fact that she was not familiar with the details of the document that was signed. She told Al-Jazeera Net that the Shambats had made great sacrifices for the revolution since the September 2013 protests.

Sudanese women also go out to celebrate constitutional declaration (Reuters)

Berry celebrations
At the intersection of the aid streets and the Azhari leader, the celebrants closed the streets and climbed high places waving the sign of victory, while motorists reacted with trumpets.

In the district of Berri, near central Khartoum, the revolutionaries celebrated the signing of the constitutional declaration with the participation of leaders of the Sudanese professional gathering.

Despite the atmosphere of joy, the martyrs who fell during the revolution were present through the slogans shouted by the rebels of the district of Berri, who witnessed chapters of the struggle between the protesters and regular forces fell during the rebels.

The celebrants chanted "we witnessed what they died ... living with the rebels" and "the blood of the martyred.

"The speakers at the signing ceremony promised to hold the killers accountable and we want them to live up to these promises," the 20-year-old told reporters.

Blood of martyrs
The leader of the gathering of Sudanese professionals Ismail Taj was among a group of young people celebrating on the Nile Street in Khartoum. The southern neighborhoods of Jabra, the press and the ten aspects of the celebration were not affected.

Protesters also went out in the suburb of the revolution in Omdurman and the Abbasid district, which was famous as one of the neighborhoods that witnessed a revolutionary movement since the first revolution.

At the Shaqalban intersection in the suburb of Omdurman, families gathered in front of the street, women and children, while youths on cars were singing patriotic songs shouting "Civil".

"The forces of freedom and change are in front of responsibility and the revolution is still on the balance of the right policy and our strength in our unity," said Walid Bakri Kharshena, a leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, as he watched the celebrations.

Kharasan stressed that the rebels will not forget and will not forgive the blood of the martyrs, which have since the protests and even the sit-in and the subsequent targeting of the youth of the revolution.