The ‘conflict economy’ of sesame in Ethiopia and Sudan

How the sector has become entangled in local and transnational conflict, and how policymakers need to respond

Research paper

Published 4 April 2024

Updated 20 May 2024

ISBN: 978 1 78413 599 7

Image — A woman harvests sesame on her plot of land in Um Naam Um village, White Nile state, Sudan, 9 October 2022. Copyright © Lisa Murray/UNEP via Global Environment Facility/Flickr. Licensed under Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.

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Video: Ahmed Soliman discusses the conflicts in Ethiopia and Sudan, transnational conflict dynamics in the region and the role of the sesame trade.

The sesame trade is no longer just a mainstay of local livelihoods in Ethiopia and Sudan. Amid civil war and territorial rivalry on both sides of the border, it now plays a central role in a conflict economy that perpetuates violence and political instability.

Competition to control sesame revenues has reshaped local agricultural markets, and provided a strategic motivation for conflict participants and members of political and economic elites. If left unaddressed, these shifts threaten to prolong and intensify conflict and worsen the inequalities faced by people living in the border regions.

This research paper explains how the sesame industry is connected to, and interacts with, both internal and transnational conflict dynamics affecting Ethiopia and Sudan. It also offers recommendations to help policymakers in Ethiopia and Sudan, as well as regional and international partners such as the UK, respond.

DOI: 10.55317/9781784135997