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French Lafarge Group admits dealing with ISIS in Syria


By Ethar Abdulhaq

(Zaman Al Wasl)- Lafarge-Holcim group for building material confirmed Zaman al-Wasl’s previous revelation about the company’s commercial relationship with the Islamic State. The head of the Syrian branch of the company originally described this news as ‘rumor’ when Zaman al-Wasl corresponded with him to take his statement about the issue.

ISIS seized tons of toxic Hydrazine material from Lafarge Cement in 2014: documents

Lafarge-Holcim said on Thursday that its cement factory in Syria probably paid money to armed groups to maintain the factory production in the war-torn country.

The admission came following an internal investigation and it placed the cement giant in a particularly embarrassing situation. The company said in a statement, “It appears from the investigation that the local company gave money to third parties to make arrangements with armed groups and of them groups which are subject to sanctions to maintain the operations and ensure the safe passage of workers and supplies to and from the factory.”

The company added that it was unable to identify the final recipient of the money, and it refrained from revealing the amount paid in 2013 and 2014, but said, “the rationale implemented to ensure the continuation of the factory operations is unacceptable.”


French cement company in Syria buys oil from ISIS: documents


A judicial source in France said prosecutors are studying the statements made by Lafarge-Holcim, and they may expand the scope of the investigation, but no decisions have been made until now.

Zaman al-Wasl published an exclusive report in February 2016 revealing Lafarge’s relationship with the Islamic State based on documents and statements.

The French Le Monde newspaper published a report discussing Lafarge’s relationship with the Islamic State based on Zaman al-Wasl’s report on 21 June 2016.

At the time, Zaman al-Wasl directed questions to Federic Jolibois, the executive president of Lafarge in Syria, about the company activities. Jolibois said that his company, “does not respond to guesses and rumors.” He insisted that the company, “adheres to United Nations decisions.” He then explained, “Security is our primary priority, and so we suspended all our industrial and commercial activities in Syria since September 2014. At that time we evacuated the al-Jabaliya site entirely (The Lafarge cement factory in the Jabaliya town that is subordinate to Ayn Arab in north eastern Aleppo), and we officially banned our employees from going to the site.”

Zaman al-Wasl was the first media outlet globally to open the file of Lafarge’s relationship with the Islamic State. Zaman al-Wasl relied on email correspondence among high-ranking company officials revealing that Lafarge was involved in buying oil from “non-governmental organizations” in areas outside the regime’s control. In the summer of 2014, Bruno Pescheux, the General Manager of Lafarge, suggested several excuses and alibis the company may use to justify buying oil “illegally.” In addition, the company was selling the Islamic State forces cement.

In the autumn of 2014, a prominent financial official in the Islamic State directed a sharp message to the executive president of Lafarge warning him that the company needed to pay the financial dues owed to the Islamic State. He recommended the company understand that they are “dealing with the strongest Islamic Army on earth, and the company does not want to ruin its relationship with them.”

In the second part of its investigation, Zaman al-Wasl showed that the Lafarge company stored the dangerous Hydrazine chemical into its factory headquarters before these fell into the hands of the Islamic State.

Hydrazine is used to treat water for electrical generation processes, but the substance is also used for other things such as preparing explosives and as fuel for rockets.

According to Zaman al-Wasl sources, Lafarge held a large storage of the substance in its factory in Syria, and no one is sure what the Islamic State forces used the chemical for after they took control of the factory.

Other than the dangerous Hydrazine chemical, Lafarge had equipment carrying radioactive material in its factory laboratories, as well as a Gamma Matrix Device and a density measurement device which were all subject to periodical checks by the Atomic Energy Committee due to the danger and extreme sensitivity of this material. Any attempt to dismantle or move the ground equipment would spread radiation harmful to humans and the surrounding environment.

During the past few years, the map of control of the Lafarge-Syria factory located in Ayn al-Arab countryside changed. In August 2013 the area went out of regime control and became part of territory controlled by the Kurdish Protection Units, the armed wing of the Democratic Union Party which is considered an extension of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party.

On 19 September 2014, the Islamic State forces managed to gain control of the Syria-Lafarge factory and kick out the Protection Units. The Units returned in the spring of 2015 and kicked out the Islamic State forces.

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