Signal packet/Home/Wire/Economy
EconomySudanHighScore 7.0

Sudan bans a wide range of imports to stem the slide of its national currency. The move aims to stabilize the economy amid ongoing financial volatility.

The Sudanese government has implemented a ban on a wide range of imports in an effort to stabilize the national currency and address its ongoing depreciation.

Quick reaction

One tap helps tune what we surface next.

Reader discussion

Public comments
0/1000

No comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.

Follow this signal

Get updates on this story

We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.

Map context

Open map near Sudan

Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.

Open live map

Related coverage

More story pages

Australian household spending rose 1.6% in March, driven by higher fuel prices linked to Middle East conflict, official data shows.

Official data from the Australian Bureau of Statistics shows that Australian household spending rose 1.6% in March, primarily driven by a 5.1% surge in transport costs linked to higher fuel prices amid the Middle East conflict.

IMF chief Kristalina Georgieva warns of a 'much worse' global economic outlook if the Middle East conflict persists into 2027, citing risks of rising inflation and oil prices hitting 125 dollars per barrel.

IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva warned that the global economy faces a 'much worse outcome' if the Middle East conflict continues into 2027, potentially driving oil prices to 125 dollars per barrel and fueling inflation.

Libya approves its first unified national budget in 13 years, ending over a decade of fiscal fragmentation. Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah confirmed the move following a consensus agreement between the country's rival legislative bodies.

Libyan Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah announced the approval of a unified national budget for 2026, marking the first such consensus in 13 years following a deal between the country's rival legislative bodies.

Sudan recalls its ambassador to Ethiopia and warns of open confrontation, accusing Addis Ababa of orchestrating drone attacks against military facilities in Khartoum.

Sudan has recalled its ambassador to Ethiopia for consultations and declared readiness for open confrontation, accusing Addis Ababa of involvement in drone attacks on military sites in Khartoum.

More live signals

Continue with the live feed.

The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.

Continue with live feed

Monitor

Track follow-ups in Monitor

Turn this public story into a watchlist seed for matching future signals, team alerts, and operational routing.

Signals API

Use these signals via API

Evaluate structured event payloads, canonical URLs, categories, geo fields, and confidence metadata for your own workflows.