Hundreds of people marched in the center of the Sudanese capital Khartoum on Saturday to demand justice for demonstrators killed in protests against ousted Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir and to prosecute former regime figures.

Protesters gathered from several areas of central Khartoum before making their way to the cabinet to demand an immediate solution to the issue of missing people who broke up the sit-in months ago.

The sit-in took place on June 3 in front of the army headquarters in Khartoum, in which 61 people were killed by security forces, according to the Ministry of Health, and resulted in the loss of people.

But the forces of change that led the protests at the time put the death toll at 128, while another medical committee reported more than 260 deaths.

Protesters gathered outside the Hamdok office in Khartoum, chanting "Blood for blood", chanting national flags.

Dozens of police were deployed at the scene, where protesters fired whistles and squatters, applauded and chanted revolutionary slogans.

"We are demanding justice for our martyrs. We are afraid that the criminals will not be prosecuted," protester Nizar bin Sufyan told AFP.

He explained that the protesters welcomed the decision of the authorities on Thursday to dissolve Bashir's party, but he continued, "but we have not seen any steps from the government so far to reveal the fate of the missing or to try the killers of the demonstrators."

Bashir and many of his regime's top leaders are currently in jail while on trial for corruption.

It is noteworthy that Sudan began on August 21 last transitional period lasts 39 months, and ends with elections, during which power sharing both the forces of change and the military council.