Political parties in Sudan condemned what they said was excessive violence practiced by the regular forces and the Shadow Security Brigades against peaceful demonstrators, and demanded an immediate investigation, according to what Anadolu reported.

The National Umma Party said in a statement, yesterday, Thursday, "We condemn the parties that fired against the demonstrators, and we demand the judicial services to immediately investigate to find out the perpetrators and bring them to justice as soon as possible."

He added, "The situation in our country is fragile and delicate, and any movement by the street in protest actions allows the forces of apostasy lurking to plot the revolution and its goals."

On Wednesday, there were deaths and injuries during protest rallies against the performance of the transitional authority, on the anniversary of the uprising of October 21, 2018.

On April 11, 2019, popular protests condemning the deteriorating economic conditions forced the army leadership to remove Omar Al-Bashir from the presidency.

For its part, the Sudanese Congress Party said in a statement, "We hold the regular forces fully responsible for all these violations, foremost among which is the assassination of the martyr Muhammad Abdel Majid."

The party called on the judicial authorities to conduct an immediate investigation that would lead to bringing the perpetrators to trial in accordance with the provisions of the law, without indolence or procrastination.

The Popular Congress Party condemned all forms of excessive violence against the peaceful demonstrators and journalists from the regular forces and the Shadow Security Brigades.

In a statement, the party affirmed its call for the freedoms approach, ensuring the rights of expression in a constitution and protecting them legally, and stressed that the dictatorial regimes ’approach to repression and abuse of citizens will only fuel the revolution.

The Resistance Committees, which organized protests against Al-Bashir's regime, said, "The revolution government responded to the peaceful revolutionaries by closing streets and bridges and suppressing freedoms ... and not only doing so; rather, they released the pampan (the well-known name in Sudan for tear gas) excessively and chased the revolutionaries through the neighborhoods."

And it continued in a statement, "Live bullets were also fired at the demonstrators, among them the victim of the revolutionary Muhammad Abdul Majeed."

In a statement at dawn on Thursday, the police announced the death of a citizen due to a fatal injury during the demonstrations.

On Wednesday, the Central Sudanese Doctors Committee (non-governmental) announced the killing of one person, Muhammad Abdul Majid, and the wounding of 14 others by police bullets in demonstrations in the name of reforming the path.

On Wednesday, the police dispersed protests in the three cities of Khartoum, Khartoum, Bahri and Omdurman, with tear gas.


And called for these demonstrations by the Sudanese Professionals Association, one of the most prominent components of the Forces of Freedom and Change Declaration, in addition to the Communist Party.

The protesters demanded the fall of the transitional government, headed by Abdullah Hamdok, and condemned the deteriorating economic conditions.

In Sudan, on August 21, 2019, a transitional period that will last for 39 months has begun, ending with elections in late 2022. Power is currently shared by the army and the Forces of the Declaration of Freedom and Change, the leader of popular protests.

Sudan suffers crises in bread, flour, fuel and cooking gas.

Because of the high exchange rate of the dollar against the pound in the unofficial market to record numbers.