Sudan's protest leaders and army rulers have agreed to establish a joint ruling council.
The decision was made after the two sides held their first formal discussions on Saturday.
According to media reports, one of the protesters confirmed the news, adding that they were now determining "what percentage of the council should be represented by civilians and how much by the military".
The new council will be the sovereign ruling body that will then form a transitional civilian administration.
This comes as thousands of protestors camped outside the army complex over the past weeks, demanding for a faster handover to civilian rule following Omar al-Bashir’s ouster earlier this month.

Thailand frees 18 Cambodian soldiers as ceasefire holds
Head-on train crash near Peru's Machu Picchu kills driver, injures dozens
MSF expects to be barred from Gaza after missing Israel deadline
Granddaughter of JFK, Tatiana Schlossberg, dies of rare form of leukemia
UK, France, others state Gaza humanitarian deterioration of serious concern