play Live Sign upShow navigation menuplay Live Click here to searchsearchSign upNews|ISIL/ISISFrench court rules cement giant Lafarge guilty of funding Syrian terrorismLong running case regarding Lafarte’s actions amid Syrian civil war sees company ordered to pay fine, executives jailed.
xwhatsapp-strokecopylinkgoogleAdd Al Jazeera on GoogleinfoFormer CEO of Lafarge Bruno Lafont arrives on the day of the verdict in the trial of the French cement group Lafarge accused of financing terrorism in Syria, at the Paris courthouse, in Paris on April 13, 2026. (AFP)By Al Jazeera staff and News AgenciesPublished On 13 Apr 202613 Apr 2026A French court has found cement group Lafarge guilty of financing “terrorism” through its Syrian subsidiary, fining the company and jailing its former CEO.
The Paris court ruled on Monday that Lafarge had paid protection money directly to ISIL (ISIS) and other armed groups and breached European sanctions to operate in northern Syria during the country’s civil war in 2013-2014. The case is just the latest of several concerning the company’s conduct during the conflict.
The court ordered Lafarge to pay a fine of 1.12 million euros ($1.32m), and for 30 million euros ($35.1m) worth of its assets to be confiscated. An additional fine was levied for having disregarded international sanctions. The ruling can be appealed.
Eight former Lafarge employees were found guilty of financing “terrorist” organisations, including former CEO Bruno Lafont, who was sentenced to six years in jail. His lawyer has said that he plans to appeal.
Former deputy managing director Christian Herrault was sentenced to five years in jail. Other former employees were handed fines and sentences ranging from one to seven years.
Presiding judge Isabelle Prevost-Desprez said the payments made by Lafarge helped to strengthen groups that carried out deadly attacks in Syria and beyond.
“It is clear to the court that the sole purpose of the funding of a terrorist organisation was to keep the Syrian plant running for economic reasons. Payments to terrorist entities enabled Lafarge to continue its operations,” Prevost-Desprez said.
“These payments took the form of a genuine commercial partnership with the Islamic State,” she added.
Judges found that Lafarge paid a total of 5.59 million euros ($6.54 million) to armed groups in Syria during the war, including to ISIL (ISIS) and Nusra Front, which was formerly led by current Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa.
Both outfits were designated terrorist groups by the European Union between 2013 and September 2014.
The Jalabiya plant, located in northern Syria and bought by Lafarge in 2008 for $680 million, began operating in 2010, months before the beginning of the Syrian uprising in early 2011.
Employees were housed in the nearby town of Manbij and needed to cross the Euphrates river to access the plant. Among the payments, the court found more than 800,000 euros were paid to secure safe passage.
Another 1.6 million euros were used to purchase source materials from quarries that were under ISIL control, the court said.
The case signified the first time a company has been tried in France for financing terrorism, but the inquiry against Lafarge has been running since 2017.
In 2022, the company saw a conviction on charges of crimes against humanity over the alleged payoffs to ISIL (ISIS) and other armed groups confirmed by a French court.
At the time, Lafarge, now part of Swiss building materials conglomerate Holcim, acknowledged that it had paid nearly 13 million euros ($13.6m) to middlemen in order to keep its Syrian cement factory running during the war, after other French firms had pulled out of the country.
The company claimed that it bore no responsibility for the money winding up in the hands of armed groups, and in 2019 won a court ruling that threw out the charge of complicity in crimes against humanity. However, an appeals court confirmed the original ruling.
A second case against the cement company, concerning allegations of complicity in crimes against humanity, is still ongoing in France.
In a separate case in the United States, Lafarge admitted in 2022 that its Syrian subsidiary paid $6 million to ISIL and the Nusra Front to allow employees, customers and suppliers to pass through checkpoints. The company paid $778 million in forfeiture and fines as part of a plea agreement.
In the case ruled upon on Monday, Lafarge was deemed guilty of funding “terrorist” organisations with “a single aim: profit,” according to the closing argument of the French national counter-terrorism prosecutor’s office (PNAT).
In response, the cement group said in a statement that it “acknowledges the court’s finding, which concerns a legacy matter involving conduct that occurred more than a decade ago and was in flagrant violation of Lafarge’s Code of Conduct.”
“The decision is an important milestone in Lafarge SA’s actions to address this legacy matter responsibly and the company is reviewing the court’s reasoning.”