An ingredient in Coca-Cola may be funding Sudan’s war

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Westerners’ consumption of a little-known tree gum – used in everything from Coca-Cola and Nestlé pet food to L’Oréal lipsticks and M&M sweets – could be funding both sides in Sudan’s bitter civil war.

Gum arabic, derived from the sap of acacia trees, is widely used as a stabiliser, thickener and binding agent. For global billion-dollar consumer companies, “uninterrupted access to this key ingredient is non-negotiable”, said financial news site Finshots.

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