Dark Moment In Sudan: Thousands Join Street Protests Against Coup, Army Responds With Live Bullets

Dark Moment In Sudan: Thousands Join Street Protests Against Coup, Army Responds With Live Bullets

By Spy Uganda Correspondent

It’s a dark moment in Sudan where security forces are responding to street protestors against this week coup with live bullets mercilessly killings multiples.

READ ALSO: It Was A Test Of Supremacy, You Can Now Come Back & Serve: Sudan Coup Leader Tells Ousted PM

“Two demonstrators were killed in the city of Omdurman by the putschist military council,” the independent Central Committee of Sudan’s Doctors said in a tweet on Saturday. It added that one was shot in the head while the other was shot in the stomach.

Thousands of Sudanese anti-coup protesters took to the streets on Saturday to support the country’s democratic transition which a military takeover and deadly crackdown derailed.

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The protests come almost a week after the military last Monday detained Sudan’s civilian leadership, dissolved the government and declared a state of emergency, leading to a chorus of international condemnation.

The crackdown by security forces earlier left at least eleven nine protesters dead and wounded around 170.

READ ALSO: AU Suspends Sudan Over Coup As World Bank & US Cut Aid

Despite the bloodshed, organisers on Saturday aimed to stage a “million-strong” march against the military’s power grab, similar to mass protests that led to the toppling of Omar al-Bashir in 2019.

‘No To Military Rule’

Hundreds gathered in the capital Khartoum and its twin cities of Omdurman and Khartoum-North, according to witnesses.

“No, no to military rule”, and “We are free revolutionaries and we will continue the road” of democratic transition, they chanted in Khartoum.

READ ALSO: You Know We Love Our Elders, I Detained Ousted PM At My Home For Own Safety-Sudan Coup Leader Says!

Others held posters of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok, ousted by the military, with slogans saying, “Don’t back down.”

In east Khartoum, protesters set car tyres on fire and held posters reading, “It’s impossible to go back”, while in the city’s southern district banners expressed concern that the country might end up back on Washington’s state sponsors of terrorism list.

That designation, accompanied by years of crippling sanctions, was lifted only last December which opened the way this year to more than $50 billion in debt relief and renewed largesse from the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.

After the coup, the World Bank suspended aid to Sudan.

Other protesters called for “freedom to the members of cabinet” who have been detained since the putsch.

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