Today, Tuesday, the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, witnessed new demonstrations, rejecting the political agreement between the President of the Sovereign Council, Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, and Prime Minister Abdullah Hamdok.

Al-Jazeera correspondent said that the demonstrators gathered in a tray (roundabout) near the Republican Palace, while the demonstrators closed Al-Arbaeen Street in Omdurman with concrete barriers and burned tires.

The police fired tear gas to disperse the demonstrators near the Republican Palace.

The demonstrators raised banners condemning what they described as the military coup, and chants were raised calling for the return of civilian rule to Sudan.

Video clips broadcast by activists on social media showed demonstrators flocking to the Arab market, preparing to head towards the Republican Palace.

continue escalation

And earlier today, Tuesday, the "Forces of Freedom and Change - the Central Council Group" said that it will continue the mass escalation with all the forces of the live revolution, until the complete removal of the "coup junta sitting on the chest of the country."

In turn, the National Resistance Committees in Khartoum said that they "do not differentiate between Hamdok, Al-Burhan, Hemedti and the rest of the generals. They are all putschists and their place is the gallows."

The "Freedom and Change-Central Council Group" forces reject the political agreement, and say that it did not address the roots of the crisis produced by the October 25 "coup" in the repeated circumvention of the revolution, as they put it.

The revolutionary forces accuse the military component of placing obstacles in the way of democratic civil transformation.

It also insists on prosecuting what it describes as the leaders of the coup, on charges of undermining the legitimacy of the transition process and suppressing demonstrators.

Therefore, it rejects the return of Al-Burhan to the position of head of the Sovereignty Council, because this is in violation of the constitutional document.

On the other hand, Hamdok sees signing the agreement as the best way to prevent bloodshed and preserve the gains of the past two years, and says that the democratic transformation is the most prominent thing that an independent government of competencies will focus on.