The rapporteur of the Beja Tribes Council in eastern Sudan, Abdullah Obshar, said that they decided to demand self-determination for the eastern Sudan region, in refusal to marginalize.

This came at the end of a conference for these tribes under the name "Conference for Peace, Development and Justice", attended by Lieutenant-General Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (Hemedti), Vice President of the Sovereign Council.

For his part, the Chairman of the Supreme Council of Beja Opticals and Independent Al-Amoudia, Muhammad Al-Amin, explained that the problem of the eastern Sudan region lies in the injustice and suffering that the region has experienced through successive governments since Sudan’s independence, indicating that the conference aims to establish rights, stressing the East’s support for the “glorious December revolution.” , according to what was reported by the Sudanese News Agency.

The designated governor of the Red Sea, Engineer Abdullah Shangaray, also addressed the conference, which was organized by the Supreme Council of the Beja Opticals and Independent Ambulances in eastern Sudan, over a period of 3 days, under the slogan "Consolidation of the historical rights of the Beja region", and stressed the ability of the people of the East to move forward in the stage of civil rule.

Shangaray indicated - according to the Sudanese Agency - that the conference embodies the democratic approach in demanding legitimate rights, praising the role of the Native Administration in bringing peace, and he hoped that this would extend to overcoming development challenges.

Hemedti received the recommendations and decisions of the conference that were contained in the final statement of the conference, which included the categorical rejection of the East Peace track in the Juba negotiations, abuses in the appointment of the governor of Kassala, and foreign interference in the country's affairs.

The recommendations also included stopping agricultural and industrial plans and mining activity in the eastern regions until the foundations for achieving the interests of the residents of the region are reached.

In the Sudanese capital, demonstrators demanded the resignation of the government of Sudanese Prime Minister Abdullah Hamdok, and denounced the economic situation in the country.

The demonstrators stressed their refusal to lift subsidies on basic commodities.

The demonstrators closed Al-Hurriya Street in the heart of Khartoum, denouncing the severe crises in the country in terms of fuel and bread, and the continuous decline in the price of the Sudanese pound.