Sudan's new Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok has been sworn in as leader of a transitional government, vowing to prioritise achieving peace and solving the country's economic crisis.
The appointment of the renowned economist came as the outgoing head of the military council General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan was sworn in as leader of the new Sovereign Council.
The Sovereign Council will run the country for three years until an election after decades of autocratic rule.
"The revolution's deep-rooted slogan, 'freedom, peace and justice' will form the program of the transitional period," Mr Hamdok told reporters at a news conference in the capital Khartoum on Wednesday.
Mr Burhan and other military officers overthrew veteran leader Omar Hassan al-Bashir in April in response to months of protests over economic hardships and dictatorship.
While Sudanese people celebrated Bashir's fall they also pressed for a handover of power to civilians during a turbulent period of protests and violence.
The unrest included a crackdown on a protest camp outside the Defence Ministry that opposition medics say killed more than 100 people in June.
The composition of the 11-member Sovereign Council that will run the country for the transition period, superseding the military council which has been disbanded, was completed on Tuesday, consisting of six civilian and five military figures.
Nine members of the council were sworn in about two hours after Burhan took the oath on Wednesday.
The final member, Mohamed al-Hassan al-Taishi, will be sworn in at a later, unspecified date, state news agency SUNA said.