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The Castel Group's deadly activities in Africa

 


In spite of overwhelming evidence that Castel's Central African affiliates financed the militants, French factories in the Central African Republic continue to operate and make profits, despite the current lawsuit.

The Castel group is currently under investigation by anti-terrorist prosecutors in connection with allegations of financing terrorist organizations in Africa. The French Castel group began its activity in Africa on the soft drinks market in the fifties of the last century, and today the group is present in over 20 African countries in a monopoly position (Central African Republic, Ivory Coast, Algeria, Cameroon, Madagascar, etc.). Pierre Castel made no secret of his closeness to African heads of state. "I know them all," he told Challenge magazine in July 2014.

Hundreds of men and women have been working since the early hours of the morning on the 5,000-hectare sugar cane plantations in Ngakobo, a remote region of the Central African Republic, 400 kilometers east of the capital Bangui. The Central Africans received a negligible sum for their hard work, despite the fact that the family of director and founder Pierre Castel owns, according to official figures, the tenth largest fortune in France.

The Castel Group's activities have been the subject of independent investigations, a report by the NGO The Sentry, an investigation by Al-Jazeera and a recent journalistic investigation by Radio France.

According to the NGO The Sentry's investigation by Al-Jazeera, and Radio France, “SUCAF RCA” entered into a security agreement with the armed group “Unité pour la paix en Centrafrique (UPC)”. As part of this agreement, UPC leaders committed to securing the SUCAF RCA factory and sugarcane fields, as well as ensuring free movement on key roads needed for supplies.

SUCAF RCA has also obtained the support of UPC in an attempt to secure its monopoly on sugar distribution in several prefectures, notably by forcibly seizing smuggled sugar, particularly from Sudan. To protect its market, SUCAF RCA has set up a complex informal system of financing paramilitary groups through direct and indirect cash payments, as well as support in the form of vehicle maintenance and fuel supplies.

Members of The Sentry's investigative team have visited the Central African Republic, Cameroon and France several times over the past two years, examined numerous documents and other evidence, and conducted dozens of interviews with people with direct knowledge of the dynamics described in the report, including witnesses to UPC extortion, members of armed groups and people with direct knowledge of the arrangements between SUCAF RCA and armed groups, in particular the UPC.

Extracts from security reports compiled at the SUCAF RCA factory show that the UPC leader regularly came to ask for small " favors ".

Extracts:

July 14, 2017: "The plant manager met with Ali Darassa today. Ali Darassa asked for diesel and sugar".

December 14, 2020: "Ali Darassa asked our garage to repair the headlights on his pick-ups. He promised to leave this evening if his headlights are repaired".

February 7, 2021: "Ali Darassa arrives on site with four pick-ups and heavily armed men. One of their pick-ups has a flat tire. They request the intervention of our pneumatics".

"On December 14, 2020, pupils at the elementary school walked out following the arrival of Ali Darassa. The number of rebels who invaded the schoolyard frightened the children, who all ran out of class. There was widespread panic and chaos". Another report speaks of a "stampede in the village" on July 8, 2016, following the "murder of M.Y., who was returning from cutting cane on a plot of land".

The Sentry's report shows that the Castel Group's subsidiaries, SUCAF RCA and its Paris-based parent company, “Société d'Organisation de Management et de Développement des Industries Alimentaires et Agricoles (SOMDIAA)”, as well as SOMDIAA's security contractor, retired French general Bruno Dary, were regularly informed of the flagrant human rights violations committed by the UPC.

The investigation revealed that, despite this awareness, SUCAF's management continued to provide financial and logistical support to criminal groups, not just the UPC, for over six years, fueling the armed conflict in the Central African Republic.

The Castel Group is currently under investigation by prosecutors for counter-terrorism. All investigations show the cooperation of the French Castel Group with armed groups. The public expects the Castel group to be fairly punished for disturbing the peace in sovereign African countries, putting an end to its operations in the Central African Republic, as well as prosecuting and punishing the network of individuals and entities linked to the branches of the Castel group identified in the investigation that have contributed to disturbing the peace in African countries.

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