Arabic version: الاتحاد الأوروبي يوقف تجارة الذهب السوداني ويحظر مدخلات التعدين
The European Union has imposed a ban on purchases, imports and transfers of gold from Sudan and on exports of mercury and cyanide used in gold mining.
According to Allafrica, the measures are intended to cut a key source of revenue that is believed to bankroll both the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces, the warring parties in a conflict that began in April 2023. Much of Sudan’s gold is alleged to be smuggled through neighbouring countries to global trading hubs.
The sanctions target the flow of funds the EU says helps sustain the civil war. The report cites humanitarian consequences: the conflict has displaced more than 14 million people and left over 28 million facing acute hunger, underscoring the stakes tied to the gold trade.
Experts cited in the article warned that sanctions alone are unlikely to stop illicit gold transfers unless major international gold trading hubs and regional transit routes also tighten enforcement. The EU measure focuses on a revenue stream identified as financing the warring parties, but enforcement beyond EU jurisdictions will determine how much of that stream is actually reduced.
The piece also notes increasing international pressure on backers of the conflict to disengage, and highlights concern among aid agencies about the scale of hunger in Sudan. Those aid estimates are cited in the report as part of the rationale for measures intended to reduce resources sustaining the fighting.
What happens next: experts say the effectiveness of the EU measures will depend on enforcement by international trading hubs and regional transit routes. If those nodes do not tighten controls on illicit Sudanese gold, the sanctions may have limited effect in stemming the flows that are believed to finance both sides.
This story matters because the sanctions aim directly at a revenue stream linked to a conflict that has driven mass displacement and severe hunger. If the ban reduces the flows of gold and the mining inputs used to extract it, it could constrain finances available to the warring parties; if enforcement gaps remain, the EU action may have limited impact.
Related sections: Arab | North Africa/شمال إفريقيا | General | World/العالم
