Meanwhile, Adama Deng, a human rights expert appointed to Sudan by the United Nations, expressed concern about reports on the human rights situation; He called on officials to stop using excessive force against demonstrators, lift the state of emergency, and release all protesters and activists.
At the end of his three-day visit to Sudan, Deng said that they had received reports of the arrest of hundreds of protesters, and that a number of women had been subjected to crimes of sexual violence.
In conjunction with Deng’s visit, the Sudanese authorities released dozens of detainees who participated in the protests that erupted more than three months ago.
The emergency lawyers committee, which follows up on the files of the detainees, confirmed that dozens of people were taken out of Soba prison in southern Khartoum and transferred to police stations before completing the guarantee procedures for their release.
Lawyer Rana Abdel Ghaffar told Sky News Arabia that the security authorities charged most of the transferees with “public nuisance” despite their long days in prison, which is a violation of all local and international human rights laws and rules, she said.
And following the actions taken by the Army Commander, Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan, on the twenty-fifth of October, which ended the partnership between civilians and the military since the overthrow of the rescue regime on the eleventh of April 2019; The security authorities arrested hundreds of politicians and activists in the resistance committees that lead the movement against these measures.
The Sudanese are continuing their marches demanding the civil state and the achievement of justice. The area surrounding the General Command of the Army in the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, is witnessing a heavy security presence, and concrete barriers have been set up on some roads and entrances leading to the presidential palace.