Thousands of Sudanese protesters have paralysed the capital
The marchers carried banners saying "
African foreign ministers are due to meet on Friday to decide whether to ask the United Nations to take over control of their 7000-strong mission currently monitoring a shaky ceasefire in
The African Union lacks both funds and equipment.
After weeks of an intense government-led media campaign against any foreign presence in
The newly established pro-government al-Intibaha newspaper last week announced the formation of a new Islamic movement against foreign intervention in
On Monday the paper reported the formation of another group, the Blood Brigades.
On Wednesday, Abd al-Rahim Muhammad Husain, the defence minister, addressed a military demonstration in central
"Jihad, victory, martyrdom," the soldiers chanted.
"Our martyrs are in heaven, and we are ready," said the minister.
Husain last week demanded all foreign reporters leave a news conference, accusing them of fabricating the Darfur conflict, which Washington calls genocide.
The United Nations is deploying about 10,000 soldiers to Sudan's south to monitor the implementation of a separate peace deal signed last year to end more than two decades of civil war there.
But the government and opposition parties have all said they do not want that UN force to extend to
PHOTO CAPTION
A Sudanese protester holds up a piece of paper in front of a chain of anti-riot policemen during a demonstration in