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Home Courts & Crime

Lafarge found guilty of gifting terrorists $6.5m

A COURT in Paris has found Lafarge, the French cement giant, guilty of paying US$6.5 million to jihadist groups, including the Islamic State (IS) and the al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front.

April 16, 2026
in Courts & Crime, World
Courts
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Lafarge found guilty of gifting terrorists $6.5m

A COURT in Paris has found Lafarge, the French cement giant, guilty of paying US$6.5 million to jihadist groups, including the Islamic State (IS) and the al Qaeda-affiliated Nusra Front.

It is the first time a company has been tried in France for financing terrorism. The inquiry against Lafarge has been running since 2017.

Bruno Lafont, Lafarge’s former CEO, was sentenced to six years in prison for terrorism financing, while Christian Herrault, former deputy managing director, received a five-year sentence in Monday’s ruling.

Lafarge said it acknowledged the court’s findings, relaying that it was involved in practice that occurred more than a decade ago – one that was ⁠in “flagrant violation of Lafarge’s Code of Conduct”.

Lafarge’s factory began operations in 2010, just months before the Syrian uprising triggered a civil war.

While other multinational companies left Syria in 2012, Lafarge evacuated only its foreign employees, and left its Syrian staff in place until September 2014, when IS, which declared a “caliphate” in parts of Syria and Iraq, seized control of the factory.

Prosecutors said Lafarge employees were housed in the nearby town of Manbig and needed to cross the Euphrates river to access the plant.

The court heard how the cement company paid intermediaries to ensure free movement for employees and trucks.

Isabelle Prevost-Desprez, presiding judge, said it was clear to the court that payments were intended to keep the company’s factory open but noted that the money helped strengthen groups that carried out attacks in Syria and abroad.

Those payments were “essential in enabling the terrorist organisations to gain control of Syria’s natural resources, allowing it to finance terrorist acts within the region and those planned abroad, particularly in Europe,” Prevost-Desprez said.

She said the amount paid to jihadist organisations – which was “never disclosed” – contributed to the “extreme gravity of the offences”.

Herrault had argued that the decision to keep the factory open was made out of concern for local staff.

Lafarge, now owned by Swiss conglomerate Holcim, was fined €1.125 million.

 

 

 

 

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