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French cement company Lafarge found guilty for financing jihadists on Syria

A Paris court found Holcim Lafarge guilty on Monday of charges that its Syrian subsidiary had financed terrorism, and violated European sanctions in order to keep a plant operating in northern Syria during the civil war.

Eight former Lafarge employees, including executives, were found guilty of funding terrorism.

The judges determined that Lafarge paid a total of 5.59 million Euros ($6.53million) between 2013 and September 2014 to jihadists groups, including the Islamic State (IS), and the al Qaeda affiliated Nusra Front. Both were designated terrorists by EU.

Isabelle Prevost Desprez, the presiding Judge, stated that payments made by?Lafarge strengthened jihadist groups who carried out deadly attacks across Syria and beyond.

"It's clear to the court that the only purpose of funding a terrorist organization was to keep the Syrian factory running for economic reasons." Prevost-Desprez stated that payments to terrorist entities allowed Lafarge's operations to continue.

She added that "these payments took the shape of a real commercial partnership? with the Islamic State".

Lafarge and Holcim did not immediately respond.

This was the first case in which a French company was charged with financing terrorism.

The Jalabiya factory, which is located in northern Syria was purchased by Lafarge for $680m in 2008. It began operating in 2010, several months before the Syrian uprising started in 2011. The court heard that the payments were made from 2013 to September 2014.

The employees, they said, were living in Manbij near the plant and had to cross the Euphrates to get to the facility. The court found that more than 800 000 euros was paid for'safe passage'.

The court also said that another 1.6 million euro was used to buy source materials at quarries 'under IS control.

Lafarge was acquired by Holcim, a Swiss-listed company in 2015

The maximum penalty that can be imposed on a company is a fine of 1.13 million euros and the confiscation of assets worth?30 millions. The court has yet to pass a sentence against Lafarge.

Lafarge, in a separate US case, admitted in 2022 that its Syrian subsidiary had paid $6 million to IS and Nusra Front in order to allow employees, customers, and suppliers to cross checkpoints following the civil war in Syria.

As part of the plea agreement, the group agreed to forfeit and pay $778 million as fines and forfeitures.

(source: Reuters)