Gold Rush Turns Deadly in Sudan: How UAE, Egypt, Russia, and China Are Fueling Africa’s New Resource War
New Delhi / Khartoum:Sudan, a nation once thriving on its oil wealth, has now been consumed by a bloody gold rush that has redrawn the country’s political and economic map — and pulled in a host of foreign powers. What began as a domestic struggle over dwindling oil revenues after 2011 has exploded into a full-scale resource war, with gold at its core and the world’s biggest players — from the UAE and Egypt to Russia and China — jostling for control.
Once Africa’s third-largest gold producer, after Ghana and South Africa, Sudan’s goldfields have become both a lifeline and a curse. The lucrative metal now finances warring factions, arms deals, and international smuggling networks. But for the country’s poor miners and farmers, it has brought nothing but death and destruction — poisoning ...





