Hundreds of people yesterday gathered in the city of Omdurman across the Nile River from Khartoum to protest against the ruling military a day after at least seven people died in clashes between security services and protesters.
Members of the crowd told reporters they came out after residents found the bodies of three young men riddled with bullets and dressed in civilian clothes close to the river early in the morning.
At least 600 people blocked off the main road leading to White Nile bridge, which connects Omdurman to Sudan’s capital, and set up barricades as riot police looked on.
Photo: AFP
Dozens tearfully chanted “down with military rule” and “blood for blood, we will not accept blood money” near the bodies that were covered in flags. A bloodied protest banner and megaphone lay nearby.
It was not possible to verify who had killed the three men, but witnesses said a truck had dumped them there.
Hundreds of thousands of people on Sunday took to the streets across Sudan to demand the military hand over power to civilians, in the biggest demonstrations since a deadly raid by security forces on a protest camp in central Khartoum three weeks ago.
The crowds gathered at several points across the capital and Omdurman before marching toward the homes of those killed since the uprising began.
Clashes between protesters and security forces left at least seven people dead and 181 wounded, 27 of them by live fire, the state-run Sudan News Agency reported late on Sunday.
The ruling military council blamed protest leaders for the deaths after they diverted the routes of their marches.
The military overthrew Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir on April 11 after months of demonstrations against his rule.
Opposition groups kept up those demonstrations as they pressed the military to hand over power, but talks collapsed after members of the security services raided the sit-in protest camp outside the Ministry of Defense on June 3.
A doctor’s group linked to the opposition said that more than 100 people were killed during the June raid and that the bodies of 40 people had been pulled from the Nile River afterward.
The Forces for Freedom and Change coalition had called for a million people to demonstrate on Sunday — the 30th anniversary of the coup that brought Bashir to power, and the African Union’s deadline for the military to hand over to civilians or face further sanctions.
Additional reporting by AP
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