Bread |
On Monday,
residents and housewives in Atbara told Radio Dabanga that the bread
shortage has continued for two days. "It is very difficult to get bread
from bakeries," a housewife said.
Bakery owners in El
Gezira said that all the peripheral localities of the state are
experiencing a lack of flour. A resident of El Haj Abdullah
neighbourhood told Radio Dabanga that the bread crisis has led to the
emergence of long queues in front of bakeries, and a decrease of the
bread size.
He pointed to the
rise of the price for flour in all localities, and that agents and
suppliers manipulate the prices - "control by the competent organs has
so far been absent". A flour sack from agents costs SDG150 ($23), while
it costs SDG250 ($38.50) in the black market.
The Minister of
Finance in White Nile state, Eisa Abakar Mohamed has attributed the
so-called bread crisis in the state to the fact that some bakeries have
not received the state's portion of flour, prompting people to line up
in front of bakeries.
The
secretary-general of the union of bakeries in Sudan, Badruldin El Jalal
told Radio Dabanga that the bread crisis which has hit Khartoum and a
number of states over the weekend "is about to be resolved".
Flour
distributors including Sayga Flour Company and Weeta are planned to
return to the flour distribution system after a stop during the previous
period.
Before, analysts
attributed earlier flour crises, in 2015 and 2016, to the lack of hard
currency at the Sudanese banks which forced the importers, reportedly
including the government, to buy US dollars at the black market.
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