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Mobile phone lines cut but Sudanese start new anti-coup protests

| Updated: November 27, 2021 21:14:06


-Reuters file photo -Reuters file photo

Mobile phone lines inside Sudan were cut on Wednesday as protesters gathered across the capital Khartoum and other cities for demonstrations against a military takeover, Reuters witnesses said.

By early afternoon, thousands were marching in scattered protests across Khartoum. In several places, security forces began firing tear gas to try to disperse them, witnesses said.

The protests, organised by local "resistance committees", are calling for a full handover to civilian authorities and for the leaders of the Oct 25 coup to be tried in court, reports Reuters.

On one main road in Khartoum, protesters burned tyres chanted: "The people are stronger, and retreat is impossible."

Others carried pictures of people killed in previous protests and of Abdalla Hamdok, the civilian prime minister who was ousted and placed under house arrest during the coup, with the slogan: "Legitimacy comes from the street, not from the cannons."

Images of protests in towns and cities including Port Sudan, Kassala, Dongola, Wad Madani and Geneina were posted on social media.

Security forces were heavily deployed on main roads and intersections, using tear gas to keep protesters away from meeting points, witnesses said. Bridges across the River Nile connecting Khartoum with its twin cities of Khartoum North and Omdurman were closed.

Mobile internet services in Sudan have been suspended since the military takeover. This has complicated efforts by pro-democracy groups to stage a campaign of anti-military rallies, strikes and civil disobedience.

The Sudanese Congress Party, which was part of a civilian coalition that had shared power with the military before the coup, said one of its leaders had been arrested following a raid on his house.

The coup ended a transitional partnership between the military and civilian groups that helped topple autocrat Omar al-Bashir in 2019.

Efforts at mediation have stalled, with military leader Abdel Fattah al-Burhan moving to cement control with help from Bashir-era veterans.

On Saturday, hundreds of thousands turned out across Sudan to protest against the coup. Medics reported that seven people were killed by gunfire of tear gas as security forces moved to disperse the demonstrations.

Protesters carrying a banner and national flags as they march against the Sudanese military's recent seizure of power and ousting of the civilian government, in the streets of the capital Khartoum, of Sudan on October 30 this year –Reuters file photo

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