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Sudan security forces shoot protesters at sit-in outside army headquarters

Still from a video showing Sudanese security forces moving in to break up a sit-in outside army headquarters in Khartoum on June 3, 2019. Image: @ashgaaly/Twitter

At least nine protesters were shot dead Monday as Sudan’s military rulers tried to break up a sit-in outside Khartoum’s army headquarters, a doctors’ committee said as gunfire was heard from the site.

The death toll “from the massacre today has risen to nine martyrs,” the Central Committee of Sudanese Doctors, which is close to the protesters, wrote on Facebook.

It also reported a “large number of critical casualties” and called for “urgent support” from the International Committee of the Red Cross and other humanitarian organizations to help the wounded.

The military council has denied multiple reports of their forces violently dispersing the sit-in in front of army headquarters.

Gunfire was heard from the protest site by an AFP journalist, who reported a heavy deployment of security forces around the streets of the capital.

There were multiple reports of the military using force to disperse the sit-in in front of army headquarters, where protesters have been camped out for weeks.

“Now an attempt is taking place to disperse the sit-in at the headquarters of the people’s armed forces by force by the military council,” said the Sudanese Professionals Association, the group which spearheaded nationwide protests that started in December.

The SPA said it amounted to a “bloody massacre  and called on Sudanese to take part in “total civil disobedience” to topple the military council.

The doctors’ committee said forces were also opening fire inside the city’s East Nile Hospital and “chasing peaceful protesters.”

It said another hospital near the site of the sit-in was surrounded and volunteers were prevented from reaching it.

Rallies against the authoritarian rule of veteran leader Omar al-Bashir led to his ouster by the military in April, but protesters have remained outside the army headquarters calling on the generals to cede power to a transitional authority.

Near the demonstration site, a witness living in the Burri neighbourhood said he could “hear the sound of gunfire and I see a plume of smoke rising from the area of the sit-in.”

Another resident of the area, in east Khartoum, said he had seen forces in “police uniform” trying to expel the demonstrators.

‘Heavy gunfire’

Britain’s ambassador to Khartoum, Irfan Siddiq, said he had heard “heavy gunfire” from his residence.

“Extremely concerned by … reports that Sudanese security forces are attacking the protest sit-in site resulting in casualties. No excuse for any such attack. This. Must. Stop. Now,” he wrote on Twitter.

The Alliance for Freedom and Change, the umbrella group of the protest movement, called for demonstrations nationwide.

The group urged “peaceful marches and rallies” and for barricades to be put up including in the capital.

Protesters had already set about building a brick barricade and had set tires and tree trunks alight on Street 60, one of the main streets in the capital.

The SPA had said on Saturday that it had reason to believe the military council was “planning and working to end the peaceful sit-in at the headquarters with excessive force and violence” after three people were killed in incidents on the fringes of the demonstration last week.

Negotiations between protest leaders and the ruling military council have broken down, as the two sides have failed to agree on whether a planned transitional body would be headed by a civilian or a military figure.


With reporting from AFP

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