French company Lafarge loses appeal in the case of financing the terrorist organization (ISIS) in Syria
Paris (ST): The French Court of Cassation confirmed the accusation of financing terrorism in Syria against the French cement company Lafarge, overturning the appeals court’s decision to nullify the accusation against the same company of complicity in crimes against humanity in Syria.
AFP quoted the Court of Cassation as saying in a statement: “In this case, it is sufficient to knowingly pay millions of dollars to a criminal group to give the character of complicity, regardless of whether the party in question is acting in order to carry out a commercial activity”.
In turn, the lawyer for the Sherpa NGO Williane Bordon considered that “the Court of Cassation proved that the investigating judge was right on two main points by confirming the prosecutions for terrorism financing and by reopening the controversy in the accusation of complicity in crimes against humanity, which will be kept in view of the compelling elements in the file.”
In a related context, secret documents obtained by the Anadolu Agency of the Turkish regime revealed that Lafarge, which is accused of complicity against humanity in Syria, has a relationship with the terrorist organization “ISIS” in Syria, and that the French intelligence is aware of this. The documents showed that the French intelligence services used Lafarge’s network of relations and cooperation with terrorist groups in Syria and their meetings to continue their operations there to obtain news from the region and that the French intelligence did not warn the company of committing these crimes.
The documents indicated that there were more than 30 meetings between Lafarge and the local and foreign French and military intelligence between 2013 and 2014. According to French media, the company provided the terrorist organization with materials and fuel to continue its terrorist activity, while the company admitted in 2017 to paying amounts to armed groups and financing ISIS in Syria in 2016.
According to official French documents, relations between Lafarge and French intelligence agencies began on January 22, 2014, when the company’s security director, Jean-Claude Villard, sent an email to the Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of the Interior, in which he indicated maintaining relations with the actors on the Syrian arena to continue their operations in Syria.
K.Q.