The day of protests in Sudan was a long one. A 16-year-old boy named Mohamed Alebaid was shot dead by security forces. Babiker Abdalhameed, 25-year-old medical doctor, died after being shot in the chest. He stepped outside a house where he had been caring for an injured protester to tell the security forces to stop throwing tear gas inside of homes, and, according to a friend who asked to remain anonymous, the security forces responded by shooting him dead.

Hundreds of protesters began to gather outside of Royal Care Hospital in Khartoum. According to reports, they chanted, sang songs and talked about the next stage of what has become one of the biggest and longest protests in modern Sudanese history.

A little after 2:30 a.m., a member of a social media group chat, solicits tents: “Tents, tents, tents. That’s what we need for tomorrow. Please if you can bring some tents, just bring them up to Royal Care.”

Another member wondered if the plan is to turn the streets in front of Royal Care into a Sudanese Tahir Square.

“Yes that’s the plan,” was the response back by one of the members in the chat.

About 40 minutes later, a member of the chat wrote, “Wallahi it’s indescribable! Everyone side by side, standing with one another in solidarity!”

“They are still coming from everywhere,” another member in the group chat responded.

Just a few hours later, the gathering is broken up by security forces, who lobbed cannisters of tear gas at them, sending protesters to seek refuge inside of the Royal Care Hospital. One of the chat members checked in at 7:29 a.m. with “We are still stuck in Royal Care.”

People are “stuck in the hospital now,” Dawoud explained, because security forces soon surrounded the hospital and were said to be arresting anyone who left it.

A friend of Dr. Babiker recounts the day’s events during a phone interview. In explaining the poor coverage of the protests in Sudan by Sudanese and foreign media he said, “We have been covering the story for ourselves via social media.”

Sudanese-American hip-hop artist Ramey Dawoud wrote days earlier in the group chat, “Dr. John Henrik Clarke told us that as Africans we have no friends. We need to believe this. The international community will come to our aid to remove Bashir and install another puppet in place.”

The sentiment is echoed in the statements of two other members in the chat: “The level of conspiracy against this uprising is shocking. We have no friends. Know this.”

A young Sudanese radio producer active in the protests questioned the international community’s silence. He wrote after a series of videos and photos documenting the attacks on peacefully protesting civilians by security forces, “What’s more disturbing is the world is silent against INHUMANE treatment of civilians.”

In the early hours of the morning, activists learned of another death of a Sudanese man—Muawia Bashir Khalil Yousif. “He was keeping some protesters safe in his house and they raided the house and shot him,” according to Duha El Mardi, a human rights activist based in Canada.

Dr. Babiker’s friend said a popular chant of the protest marches is “silmia, silmia,” which means “peaceably, peaceably. ” He explained that it is an effort to make clear to the world the protestors’ commitment to nonviolence. Instead of raising fists in air, protestors are often seen raising up cell phones to gain clearer shots of the uprising that, because of the lack of national and international media coverage, they are largely broadcasting to the world themselves via social media. But sadly, the world doesn’t seem to be watching. Not even the CIA, which has the biggest office in Africa and the Middle East in Khartoum.