Sporadic demonstrations took place in a number of neighborhoods of the Sudanese capital Khartoum this morning, in remembrance of the operation to break the sit-in of the General Command, which took place on the twenty-ninth of Ramadan last year, and led to deaths and injuries of the sit-in.

The demonstrators called for the perpetrators to be revealed and brought to trial, as they closed some roads and burned tires, uploaded pictures of the victims of the sit-in and chanted slogans demanding retribution.

In turn, the joint armed forces closed all entrances that lead to the headquarters of the Army General Command and the place of the sit-in.

For his part, the Sudanese Professionals Association called for the necessity of revealing the perpetrators of the process of breaking up the popular sit-in in front of the General Command.

The assembly called on the government investigation committee to submit its report without delay, while informing the public opinion of all the circumstances that prevent it from completing its work if it is not able to complete it on time.

The statement stressed "the necessity to reveal the commanders and perpetrators of these crimes and the limits of their roles and bring them to account", warning of "delaying and relying on what he described as bargaining chambers, and waiting for the people to forget the demand to condemn criminals", as he put it.

On the other hand, the Sudanese Transitional Prime Minister Abdullah Hamdouk emphasized that justice is the first slogan of the Sudanese revolution.

Hamadok said on his account on Twitter, on the occasion of the first anniversary of the sit-in process, that achieving justice and retribution in the process of breaking up the sit-in of the General Command is one of the constants, which is not conceded at all.

On June 3, 2019, armed men in military uniform broke up a sit-in by protesters against the regime of former President Omar al-Bashir in front of the General Command of the Army in the capital, Khartoum.

According to the Ministry of Health, the demolition process resulted in the death of 66 people, while the Forces for Freedom and Change, the leader of the protest movement, estimated the number of dead at 128.

At the time, the forces of change held the military council - which was then in charge - responsible for breaking up the sit-in, while the council said that it had not issued a silver order.

On August 21, 2019, Sudan began a 39-month transitional period, during which power is shared by the military council, the forces of the declaration of freedom and change, and ending with elections.