Muscat Daily

Two Lafarge bosses charged over funding IS to keep Syria factory working

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Paris, France - Two senior executives at French-Swiss cement maker LafargeHol­cim, including its former CEO, were charged on Friday over claims that top management turned a blind eye to payments to extremists in Syria, a judicial source said.

Lafarge is accused of paying the Islamic State (IS) group and other militants through a middleman between 2013 and 2014 so that the company’s factory in Jalabiya, northern Syria, could continue to operate despite the war.

Four people had already been charged over the case.

At Friday’s hearings in Paris, Bruno Lafont, CEO from 2007 to 2015, and the group’s former Syria chief Christian Herrault, appeared in court and were charged with ‘financing a terrorist organisati­on’ and ‘endangerin­g the lives of others’ and remanded in custody.

On Thursday Eric Olsen, who took over from Lafont as CEO after the company merged with Switzerlan­d’s Holcim, was charged with the same crimes.

Three former officials at the Jalabiya factory were charged in the case last week.

Lafarge’s Syrian subsidiary Lafarge Cement Syria (LCS) paid out some US$5.6mn (€4.7mn) between July 2012 and September 2014, according to a report commission­ed by LafargeHol­cim and seen by AFP. Of this, more than half a million dollars went to IS, according to the April report by US consultant­s Baker McKenzie. Herrault acknowledg­ed earlier this year that Lafarge was involved in a ‘racket’, adding that he kept Lafont ‘regularly informed’. But Lafont has denied that he knew what was happening, saying things had appeared to be ‘under control’.

LCS is also suspected of using fake contracts to buy fuel from IS, which took control of most of Syria's oil reserves in June 2013.

The factory’s former manager Frederic Jolibois, who is among those charged, has admitted to buying oil from ‘non-government­al organisati­ons’, notably Kurdish and Islamist groups, in violation of the EU embargo declared in 2011.

Lafarge hung on in Syria for two years after most French companies had left as IS made inroads. This photo shows the entrance of the headquarte­rs of LafargeHol­cim in Paris. The group was created in 2015 by the merger of French cement manufactur­er Lafarge and its Swiss counterpar­t Holcim

Lafarge’s Syrian subsidiary LCS paid out some US$5.6mn between July 2012 and September 2014, according to a report

 ?? (AFP) ??
(AFP)

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