Protests erupted in several parts of Sudan on Thursday demanding the overthrow of Omar al-Bashir's regime. Police intervened with tear gas to disperse protesters who said they would not stop protest until the president stepped down.

The demonstrators shouted slogans against the regime demanding the departure of Bashir, in a number of Sudanese cities, including the capital Khartoum, and the city of Abid, the capital of North Kordofan State in western Sudan, and Gedaref, the capital of the state of Gedaref in the east of the country, and in the Khaddar west of the city of mobility in the central state of the island, To Port Sudan and Shendi.

Witnesses said the security forces intervened to disperse the demonstrations using tear gas.

Al-Jazeera correspondent says the operations are taking place in the central districts of Khartoum between the security forces and the demonstrators who were walking towards the presidential palace.

Eyewitnesses monitored the demonstrators for security forces in a number of neighborhoods near the Gedaref market.

Professional groups including lawyers participate in the protest against the Bashir regime (social networking sites)

The Rally of Sudanese Professionals (INDEPENDENT) has sparked protests in the Kadro district north of Khartoum and the Kalakala south of the capital, while activists on social networking platforms have been photographing and videotaping other protests in neighborhoods in Khartoum.

"I will pretend and continue to demonstrate until this regime falls," said Adel Ibrahim, 28, who was on a Khartoum street with other demonstrators. "We protest to save our future and the future of our country."

The demonstrators, who use social media to mobilize, chanted slogans of "freedom of peace and justice" and chanted "the people want to overthrow the regime," the slogan of the "Arab Spring" that began in 2011.

Amidst the applause and applause, crowds of Sudanese and Sudanese sometimes faced gas.

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The leadership office of the ruling party in Sudan on Wednesday called on students and young people not to participate in the marches on Thursday, noting that they are "calls harmful to the country."

The Union of Sudanese Professionals (an independent group of teachers, doctors and engineers) and opposition parties announced mass rallies in 12 Sudanese cities on Thursday, including a motorcade in Khartoum.

The demonstrations began on 19 December in protest against the practices of the al-Bashir regime and 24 people were killed in confrontations during which according to an official toll, Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International reported at least 40 people, including children and medical staff.

Khartoum considers Washington to be behind its economic difficulties. In 1997, the United States imposed a severe ban on Sudan from engaging in any commercial activities or international financial transactions, and lifted restrictions in October 2017.

"The government will not change the demonstrations, and the road is one for the government," Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir told a crowd chanting slogans calling for him to remain in power in Nyala, capital of South Darfur.