Industrial Sector

  • The private sector should raise funds to help rebuild Sudan’s loss of infrastructure. The private sector can participate in rehabilitative infrastructure projects, such as building roads, bridges, and energy facilities. Improved infrastructure enhances connectivity, trade, and economic growth.
  • Advocate for the protection of the remaining industrial zones in Sudan amidst the ongoing conflict
  • The private sector should invest in energy projects, particularly renewable energy initiatives, to ensure a stable power supply.
  • Replenish lost supplies of consumer goods, food products, medicines, and other relevant items at a rate favorable to the pressures of the Sudanese economy at the standard of the most vulnerable populations.
  • A strong supply chain is required. Make sure that supply adequately fulfills demand to not only keep Sudanese citizens alive, but to help them survive. Strategically work against the black-market rate by stabilizing the price of basic necessities, which have skyrocketed since the onset of the war.
  • Reinvigorate the pharmaceutical sector’s key industries and points. Import medicines at a subsidized rate that deliberately responds to the most vulnerable individuals’ financial capabilities. Ensure that basic goods such as medicines are provided to Sudan at no increase to its national debt; the private sector should ensure that Sudan is not punished and plunged deeper into financial crisis due to the industrial losses acquired over the course of the war.
  • Support pharmacists from around the country who utilize virtual platforms to announce newly arrived drugs and notify citizens with the pharmacies that they would be sold. Ensure that the distribution of essential medicines takes place through local routes that do not destabilize the mechanisms created by individuals and local activists to survive in the war.
  • Steps should be taken to advance information, reporting, notification, and tracking of drug shortages across the 18 Sudanese states.