Sudan police speak after forces intervene against protests

Sudan’s police Tuesday ordered its forces to avoid intervening against protesters as the demos enters the fifth day.

The call by the police, following a policy of non-intervention by the military, came as thousands of protesters massed for the fourth straight day outside army headquarters in Khartoum, urging the top brass to back their call on President Omar al-Bashir to resign.

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The protests, which first began in December, pose the biggest challenge to President Bashir in his three decades of iron-fisted rule.

Thousands chanting “freedom, freedom” stayed camped outside army headquarters in Khartoum since Saturday, after security forces abandoned two separate bids to disperse them when soldiers fired in the air to protect demonstrators earlier in the day, witnesses said.

“We call on God to preserve the security and calm of our country … and to unite the Sudanese people .. for an agreement which would support the peaceful transition of power,” police spokesman said in a statement.

It added that police had “ordered all its forces” not to “intervene against the citizens or peaceful rallies”.

Two soldiers have been killed by gunmen in Sudanese capital Khartoum, after clashes erupted on Tuesday between the army and a pro-government militia.

Thousands of people are staging a sit-in outside the defence ministry demanding President Omar al Bashir’s resignation.

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