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Economy another victim of war in impoverished Sudan

  • The war has led industries to cease production, while businesses and food stocks have been looted
  • The Sudanese state ‘is completely absent from the scene’ in all sectors, with aid agencies having long warned of impending famine

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Traders and donkey farmers gather in an open market in Gedaref state in eastern Sudan on February 16, amid increasing uses for donkeys in transportation due to fuel and petrol shortages in the war-torn country. Photo: AFP

Before the Sudanese army and paramilitary fighters turned their guns on each other last year, Ahmed used to sell one of Sudan’s main exports: gum arabic, a vital ingredient for global industry.

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Now he is out of business, and his story encapsulates the broader economic collapse of Sudan during 10 months of war.

Since combat between two rival generals began on April 15, Ahmed has been at the fighters’ mercy.

A man checks sacks of grains at a market in Gedaref, eastern Sudan, on February 22. Since last April, Sudan has been gripped by fighting between two rival generals. Photo: AFP
A man checks sacks of grains at a market in Gedaref, eastern Sudan, on February 22. Since last April, Sudan has been gripped by fighting between two rival generals. Photo: AFP

“When the war began, I had a stock of gum arabic in a warehouse south of Khartoum that was intended for export,” Ahmed said, asking to use only his first name for fear of retaliation.

“To get it out I had to pay huge sums to the Rapid Support Forces,” the paramilitaries commanded by Mohamed Hamdan Daglo who are at war with the Sudanese Armed Forces led by Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.

“I had to pay multiple times in areas under their control, before my cargo got to areas controlled by the government,” Ahmed said.

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But the government – loyal to the army – “then demanded I pay taxes” on the product, an emulsifying agent used in everything from soft drinks to chewing gum.

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