On 30 October, an unprecedented number of people protested around Sudan against the coup. The Guardian estimated the number as "hundreds of ", and Ma Masr estimated "s". Security forces used teargas and live bullets against protestors and set up barbed wire barrices. Protestors' chants included "No, not to military rule" and ed for al-Burhan to be arrested and held in Kobar Prison. Protestors held pictures of al-Burhan and Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo (Hemetti) covered in red. Three unarmed protestors were shot de outside the parliament building in Omdurman, one dying from a chest wound in hospital. Injuries sustained by protestors included he and neck gunshot wounds and trauma from beatings with batons. Treatment for tear gas exposure was needed. One protestor was run over by a military vehicle. Protestors carried banners in support of Hamdok and criticising Egyptian president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi. Protestors held signs stating, "the Emirates will not govern us, nor the implementation of Sisi." On 31 October, security forces assaulted protestors, forcing them to dismantle street barrices. The protestors rebuilt the barrices. Governmental and educational institutions, banks and shops remained cd. The resistance committees, the Sudanese Bankers Association, the Bank of Khartoum and the Democratic Lawyers Alliance ed for continued strikes and civil disobedience. Internet outages Follog the coup, Internet outages in Sudan were reported by international watchdog groups including NetBlocks. The outages were later corroborated by the Sudan Ination Ministry. Internet services were mostly blocked again on 27 October. The Sudanese Journalists Network interpreted the reason for the internet and telecommunications cutoffs to be the security forces' aim of "commit more crimes against the Sudanese" and hiding evidence of the security forces' involvement in attacks including the 3 June 2019 Khartoum massacre. Media Government-owned state television operated uninterrupted. Government ministries and embassies Mariam al-Mahdi, Minister of Foreign Affairs rejected the coup, stating that "any coup in the country is rejected" and that Sudanese would "resist [the coup] by all civil means". She described the arrest of Hamdok as "very dangerous and unacceptable". On 26 October, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs supported al-Mahdi's earlier statement and al-Mahdi spoke directly to the Associated Press, stating "We are still in our positions. We reject such coup and such unconstitutional measures." |
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