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โ€˜Spoiled insulinโ€™: Sudan war disrupts drug supplies, fuelling smuggling

On a modest bed inside his war-battered home in the Khartoum North neighbourhood of the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, Murtada Mohieddin, a diabetic patient in his early 50s, carefully counts his remaining doses of insulin. His search for medicine has transformed into a harrowing ba

โ€˜Spoiled insulinโ€™: Sudan war disrupts drug supplies, fuelling smuggling
Al Jazeera โ€” 1 June 2026
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On a modest bed inside his war-battered home in the Khartoum North neighbourhood of the Sudanese capital, Khartoum, Murtada Mohieddin, a diabetic patient in his early 50s, carefully counts his remaining doses of insulin. His search for medicine has transformed into a harrowing battle โ€“ not just to find the treatment he needs to survive his diabetes, but to ensure the medicine is not expired or ruined.

โ€œSometimes the insulin is spoiled,โ€ Mohieddin tells Al Jazeera, inspecting his limited supply. โ€œYou wouldnโ€™t know if it is ruined or expired. You can check the expiration date, but it could still be damaged from poor storage.โ€

More than three years of civil war have crippled Sudanโ€™s healthcare infrastructure: hospitals, health centres and pharmaceutical factories have been shut and vital medical supply chains and storage across the country have been disrupted.

The war, which erupted as a power struggle between Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), has killed more than 50,000 people and displaced 14 million โ€“ nearly a quarter of the countryโ€™s population.

The devastating conflict has paralysed domestic pharmaceutical production and collapsed vital supply chains across the country.

According to a World Health Organization (WHO) news release dated April 14, 2026, Sudan represents the worldโ€™s largest humanitarian crisis, with 21 million people lacking basic healthcare services out of 34 million needing aid.

In the void left by the closure of pharmaceutical companies, smuggling networks have flourished, flooding the market with unregulated drugs locally known as โ€œBokoโ€ medicines.

These include critical intravenous malaria medications smuggled across borders. Because they completely bypass strict temperature controls and quality checks during transit, these drugs are frequently spoiled, rendering them either totally ineffective or lethally toxic to patients.

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