Hundreds of thousands of people marched to the presidential palace in Sudan’s capital Khartoum yesterday in protest at the October 25 military coup, drawing volleys of tear gas and stun grenades from security forces, Reuters witnesses said.
Some protesters managed to reach the gates of the palace and the protest’s organisers called on more to join a planned sit-in there after sundown.
Reuters was not able to verify how many were able to reach the palace.
Live video footage showed those who remained being tear gassed heavily.
The outpouring of protest, the ninth major demonstration since the coup and one of the largest, marked the 2018 burning of a ruling party building which touched off a popular uprising that led to the overthrow of long-ruling Islamist autocrat Omar al-Bashir.
Protests against the coup have continued even after the reinstatement of the prime minister last month, with demonstrators demanding no more military involvement at all in government in a transition towards free elections.
Demonstrators marched down a main road leading to the palace, chanting “the people are stronger and retreat is impossible”, with some darting into side streets to dodge volleys of tear gas.
There were no immediate reports of injuries or arrests.
Despite security forces blocking bridges over the Nile river into the capital early yesterday, protesters were able to cross a bridge connecting the city of Omdurman to central Khartoum but were met with heavy tear gas, Reuters witnesses said.
Reuters witnesses also watched protesters crossing a bridge from Bahri, north of Khartoum, to the capital.
Images shared on social media showed protests taking place in several other cities including Port Sudan, El-Deain, Madani and Kassala.
Early yesterday joint army and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces sealed off major roads leading to the airport and the army headquarters and they were heavily deployed around the presidential palace.
Protesters also blocked roads leading to the main route of the march.
Some were carrying Sudanese flags and photos of protesters who were killed in demonstrations in the past few months.
Others were handing out coronavirus (Covid-19) masks and carrying stretchers in anticipation of people being wounded.
The Central Committee of Sudanese Doctors says 45 people have been killed in crackdowns on protesters since the October 25 coup.
It was the ninth in a series of demonstrations against the coup, which have continued even after the military signed a deal on November 21 with Hamdok, who had been under house arrest, and released him and other high-profile political detainees.
On Saturday night, Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok warned in a statement that Sudan’s revolution faced a major setback and that political intransigence from all sides threatened the country’s unity and stability.
The military and civilian political parties had shared power since Bashir’s removal.
However, the agreement reinstating Hamdok angered protesters, who previously had seen him as a symbol of resistance to military rule and denounced his deal with the military as a betrayal.
Civilian parties, and neighbourhood resistance committees that have organised several mass protests, demand full civilian rule under the slogan “no negotiation, no partnership, no legitimacy”.
On Saturday night and early yesterday morning, people arrived in bus convoys from other states, including North Kordofan and Gezira, to join the protests in Khartoum, witnesses said.
A protester waves the national flag during a rally in Khartoum to mark three years since the start of mass demonstrations that led to the ouster of strongman Omar al-Bashir.