A day after security forces violently cleared the main protest camp in Khartoum, the leaders of Sudan’s protest movement rejected a plan by the nation’s military leaders to hold elections within nine months.

The protesters vowed instead to push ahead with an open-ended civil disobedience campaign to force the military from power.

At least 35 people were killed and over 650 were wounded in a firestorm of violence on Monday, protest organizers said, when paramilitary troops swept through central Khartoum, the capital, firing on protesters, burning tents and beating civilians.

A doctors’ group that has helped organize protests later said Wednesday that as many as 101 people had been killed, though that number could not be immediately confirmed.