 Hello, you're watching the International Daily Roundup by People's Dispatch, where we bring you major news developments from around the world, our headlines. Mass protests in Sudan in support of a civilian-led democratic transition. U.S.-owned Portuguese bank blocks crucial medical supplies to Venezuela, hundreds protest the arrival of Israeli foreign minister in Bahrain, and appeals court allows continued expulsion of asylum seekers from the U.S. In our first story, mass protests in defense of a civilian-led transition to democracy were held in Sudan on September 30th, and estimated 20,000 people gathered in Khartoum after a failed coup attempt recently. It was reportedly led by a faction in the military which supported the ousted dictator Omar al-Bashir. 23 officers, including the commander of the Armored Corps in the city of Omdurman, were arrested. Since then, tensions within the civic-military transitional government have escalated. Military leaders have blamed the civilian counterparts for the economic and social crisis. Meanwhile, Sudan's resistance committees, which formed the backbone of the December Revolution in 2018, have been mobilizing. These groups, the Sudanese Communist Party and the Sudanese Professionals Association, have held regular protests. They have denounced the dominance of the military and the failure to uphold the aims of the revolution. Protesters stated again on Thursday that they would not allow the military to control the revolution. Many travelled to Khartoum on trains from Madani and Atbara. As per reports, security forces fired wallies of tear gas to disperse the crowds. The Sudanese Professionals Association stated that the only way to protect the democratic transition was to end any partnership with the military council. In our next story, the Portuguese bank Novo Banco has blocked crucial medical supplies to Venezuela for over two months. The bank has frozen a $12.7 million payment from the country to the Pan American Health Organization. The funds are to pay for 30 million syringes and 6 million vaccines against missiles, mumps and rubella. The order also includes over 8 million doses of diphtheria, tetanus, polio and yellow fever vaccines. The funds belong to Venezuela's public development bank, Bandes. Novo Banco has also illegally withheld $1.7 billion of Venezuelan assets since late 2017. While Portuguese prosecutors have unblocked several accounts, transfers are still subject to judicial authorization. Since July 22, Novo Banco has not responded to the payment request made by Bandes. A coalition of European parliamentarians have denounced the act as over-compliance with US sanctions. Around three-fourths of Novo Banco is owned by the US private equity firm Lone Star. Contrary to official claims, US sanctions on Venezuela have continued to restrict crucial aid in purchases. The first shipment of vaccines through COVAX reached Venezuela early in September. The doses were supposed to arrive in July, but the final four payments were blocked. Protests broke out on September 30, as Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid arrived in Bahrain. This was the highest-level official visit after both countries' normalized relations in 2020. The foreign minister landed in the capital Manama to inaugurate the Israeli embassy on Thursday. Protesters took to social media using the tag Bahrain rejects Zionists. They also burned tires in the streets and carried black-arts carrying go-out air. They rejected the normalization agreement as treason and an abandonment of Palestinians. Additional forces were deployed on the route to the airport, and no Israeli flags were displayed on the main roads. Israel and Bahrain will sign several bilateral agreements, including those involving Israel's National Water Company. Memorandums of understanding on economy and technology will also be signed. Bahrain joined the UAE, Morocco, and Sudan in agreeing to establish ties with Israel last year. This was under the U.S. Brokot Abraham Accords. The deals were denounced as an undermining of the Arab country's commitment to not normalize ties with Israel during its occupation of Palestine. And finally, an appeals court in the U.S. has allowed the continued forcible expulsion of undocumented migrants. The Biden administration filed an appeal against a prior ruling blocking the use of Title 42. The order is a health policy. This discriminatory term error law prevents people from applying for asylum. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a petition against the law. District judge Emmett Sullivan ruled that the measure had no legal basis and blocked its use starting September 30th. He argued that the policy denied asylum seekers the opportunity to seek humanitarian benefits. This order only applied to families and not single adults. However, the U.S. Court of Appeals states Sullivan's ruling on Thursday. Meanwhile, legal proceedings against Title 42 are also underway. Countries taking place just after 15,000 Haitian migrants were transferred or detained from Del Rio and Texas. Over 4,600 people have been deported to Haiti on 43 flights since September 19th. The U.S. Special Envoy to Haiti resigned last week stating that he would not be associated with his, to quote, inhuman and counterproductive decision. His letter went on to say that the U.S. policy towards Haiti has remained deeply flawed. He denounced the cycle of international political interventions in Haiti and the United States' support for the de-factor Prime Minister Oriol Henri. That's all we have time for today. We will be back on Monday with more news from around the world. Until then, keep watching People's Dispatch.