
The European Union has finally taken action to choke off the illicit gold trade that has been bankrolling the devastating civil war in Sudan.
By banning the purchase, import, and transfer of Sudanese gold, the EU aims to deprive both the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of the revenue they have been using to sustain a conflict that has displaced 14 million people since April 2023.
Gold has long served as the primary engine for this violence, with the RSF controlling key fields in the west and the army overseeing operations in the north and east. In addition to the gold ban, the EU is cutting off the supply of mercury and cyanide to Sudan, chemicals essential to the mining process.
While the EU Council claims these measures will increase pressure on those fueling the violence, the reality remains that much of this gold is smuggled through neighboring countries like Egypt, Chad, and Libya before reaching global hubs like Dubai.
Experts warn that unless these major trading centers and transit routes take similar steps to tighten enforcement, the flow of illicit gold will continue to sustain the warring factions.
This latest move expands an existing sanctions regime, but it remains to be seen if international pressure can effectively starve a conflict that has left 28 million people facing acute hunger.
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