British American Tobacco accused of helping North Korea fund terrorism in lawsuit

A picture


Hundreds of US military service members, civilians and their families have filed a lawsuit for unspecified damages against British American Tobacco (BAT), one of the world’s largest tobacco companies, and a subsidiary, claiming the company spent years illicitly helping North Korea fund terrorism weapons that were used against Americans.BAT formed a joint venture in 2001 with a North Korean company to manufacture cigarettes in the country.The venture quietly continued, a 2005 Guardian investigation revealed, even as the US government publicly warned North Korea was funding terrorism and imposed sanctions on the country.Amid mounting international pressure in 2007, the company claimed it was ending business in North Korea, but secretly continued its operation through a subsidiary, the US justice department said in 2023.BAT’s venture in North Korea provided about $418m in banking transactions, “generating revenue used to advance North Korea’s weapons program”, Matthew Olsen, then the justice department official in charge of its national security division, said during a 2023 Senate hearing.

In 2023, BAT entered into a deferred prosecution agreement and along with the subsidiary, which pleaded guilty, agreed to pay the US $629m in fines for conspiring to violate sanctions and bank fraud.“On behalf of BAT, we deeply regret the misconduct arising from historical business activities that led to these settlements, and acknowledge that we fell short of the highest standards rightly expected of us,” Jack Bowles, then the company’s chief executive, said in a statement at the time.“Adhering to rigorous compliance and ethics standards has been, and remains, a top priority for BAT.In recent years we have transformed our compliance and ethics programme, which encompasses sanctions, anti-bribery, anti-corruption and anti-money laundering.The significant steps already taken, as well as the continued refinements to the programme that will be made as part of these settlements, will leave us even better equipped to lead a responsible and sustainable business.

”The civil lawsuit filed on Thursday seeks compensation under a federal law that allows victims of terrorist attacks to not only sue the organization allegedly responsible for damages, but also any third parties said to have aided and abetted, or conspired to assist, in an act of terrorism,“This case alleges a clear nexus between BAT’s clandestine scheme in North Korea and the weapons used in deadly terrorist attacks,” said Ryan Sparacino, a lawyer at Sparacino PLLC who is representing the plaintiffs,The lawsuit argues BAT should be liable for damages because North Korea used profits from the cigarette venture and cigarette smuggling to fund the development of weapons of mass destruction for Iran’s revolutionary guard and Hezbollah,The complaint says those weapons were used in attacks on 8 January 2020 on the al-Asad airbase and Erbil airbase in Iraq and a 2022 missile attack in Kurdistan,More than 100 soldiers were diagnosed with traumatic brain injuries in the 8 January 2020 attack and more than a dozen people were killed.

Many more were injured in the 2022 attack in Kurdistan.“The devastating harm caused by terrorist violence does not fade with time – families carry it every day,” said Raj Parekh, the former acting US attorney for the eastern district of Virginia and a partner at Sparacino PLLC who is also representing the plaintiffs in the case.“This case is about pursuing justice for American service members, civilians, and their loved ones, and about seeking accountability for conduct that allegedly enabled the terrorist attacks against them.”“We do not comment on potential or pending legal claims,” a BAT spokesperson said.The plaintiffs include about 200 service members who suffered a range of injuries from the attacks, including traumatic brain injuries and post-traumatic stress disorder.

Also included among them is the widow and the estate of a man killed while assisting refugees during the 2022 attack in Kurdistan.Several family members who also say they suffered harm from the attacks are plaintiffs as well.“Defendants knew – or recklessly disregarded – that by operating an illicit joint venture with a North Korean state-owned tobacco company, they were financing the missile and rocket attacks carried out by the IRGC and Hizballah against Americans,” says the lawsuit, which was filed in federal court in the eastern district of Virginia.“For at least a decade, Defendants persisted in this scheme, funneling hundreds of millions of dollars to North Korean terrorist fronts financing missiles used to attack Americans, including Plaintiffs, and defying repeated warnings that their conduct would enable these attacks.”In 2023, the US supreme court unanimously ruled that victims of a 2017 Islamic State attack were not entitled to damages from Facebook, Twitter, and Google.

The plaintiffs argued the companies were liable for damages because they knew IS was using their platforms for recruitment and did not do enough to stop it.The supreme court said that inaction was not enough – the plaintiffs had to show that the companies “consciously and culpably” assisted in the terror act to make it succeed.Last week, a federal appellate court in the District of Columbia revived a lawsuit seeking damages against pharmaceutical companies who are alleged to have funded terrorism in Iraq by paying bribes to a Hezbollah-controlled militia to win contracts at the ministry of health.The companies deny wrongdoing.The suit against BAT argues the company knew its money was funding terrorism and continued the venture anyway.

It points to numerous public statements, as well as public and private reports.The company was also aware of reports and public statements detailing North Korea’s support for terrorism, the suit alleges.“Its in-house personnel closely monitored US government and media reports, and its own corporate filings confirm it was acutely aware of the terrorist finance risks presented by the illicit cigarette trade,” the complaint says.
sportSee all
A picture

Lindsey Vonn airlifted from course after crash in final downhill before Olympics

Lindsey Vonn crashed out of the final World Cup downhill before the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics on Friday, leaving the American skiing great limping and clutching her left knee as organizers abandoned the race amid worsening conditions.The 41-year-old lost control after landing a jump on the upper section of the course in Crans-Montana, Switzerland, skidding sideways into the safety netting as snow fell steadily and visibility deteriorated. Vonn’s airbag deployed on impact and she remained down for several moments while medical staff attended to her on the piste.Vonn eventually stood and was able to ski away, but did so gingerly. She repeatedly took weight off her left leg, using her poles to steady herself, and stopped several times on the run down to check her knee

A picture

Your Guardian sport weekend: Australian Open finals, Premier League and T20 cricket

Stuart Goodwin and Emillia Hawkins kickstart the weekend’s football programme with our unmissable rolling blog that rises early to provide all the breaking news and vibes from around the grounds. There’ll be buildup to Saturday’s five Premier League matches, a full Championship and lower-division programme, plus plenty of swirl around the Bundesliga and La Liga, with Bayern Munich and Barcelona in action. Why not join the conversation by sending your thoughts and observations to matchday.live@theguardian.com?Last year’s final brought heartache for Aryna Sabalenka but her consistency since the start of 2025 has been impressive, with the world No 1 reaching the final at nine of the 16 events she contested

A picture

Galopin chases Gold Cup glory but waits on Leopardstown inspection

Prospects for the most valuable and significant weekend of racing in the run-up to the Cheltenham festival in March remained in the balance on Friday evening after both Leopardstown and Sandown called inspections for Saturday morning due to fears of overnight rain.Leopardstown has had nearly 200mm of rain over the last two weeks ahead of the Dublin Racing Festival, which is due to stage eight Grade One races over the weekend. Paddy Graffin, Leopardstown’s clerk of the course, will inspect at 8am.“We’ve had a look at a fresh line of the hurdle track right out beside the chase track,” Graffin said on Friday. “In my opinion, this line is currently fit to race despite 22mm of rain last night

A picture

Novak Djokovic stuns Jannik Sinner in five sets: Australian Open 2026 semi-final – as it happened

So on Sunday history will be made one way or the other, with Djokovic going for No 25 and Alcaraz going for the career slam. Djokovic did defeat Alcaraz in the Australian Open quarter-finals last year – but Alcaraz got his revenge in the US Open semi-finals, on his way to the title. But trying to break down and predict the final is a perilous job after what we’ve witnessed today. And is probably more than I can attempt to do after hours and hours and hours of typing. Many thanks for your company and contributions today, do join me again tomorrow for Sabalenka v Rybakina in the women’s final

A picture

Djokovic shocks Sinner in late-night thriller to reach Australian Open final

At 1.33am on Saturday morning in Melbourne, four hours and nine minutes after his night shift had begun, Novak Djokovic collapsed to the floor with his arms aloft and stared up to the skies in utter disbelief. While Djokovic would normally reserve his most exuberant celebrations for triumphant finals, in truth this result was an even greater achievement than some of his victories in majors.The Serb is 38, an age at which most players are long finished, yet somehow he is still competing for the biggest titles. On Rod Laver Arena, the most important stage of his career, he pulled off perhaps his greatest upset, recovering from two sets to one down to topple Jannik Sinner, the two-time defending champion and second seed, 3-6, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4 to return to the final of the ­Australian Open

A picture

Ten to watch: the athletes who can bring glory to Australia at the 2026 Winter Olympics | Martin Pegan

Australia’s 53-strong team is the second largest sent to a Winter Olympics and recent results suggest that will be more than enough to land a record medal haul in Milano Cortina. Five of Australia’s six medallists from the past two Games, including defending moguls champion Jakara Anthony, will return in 2026 and be among at least 10 genuine podium chances.The Beijing 2022 team secured Australia’s greatest Winter Olympics tally with four medals – one gold, two silver and a bronze – but there are high hopes that record will be shattered after 11 athletes won 26 medals across seven disciplines during the current World Cup season. Here are Australia’s main medal hopes (in alphabetical order) to watch when Milano Cortina 2026 begins on 6 February.The defending Olympic moguls champion is out to become the first Australian to win successive winter gold medals and arrives in Milano Cortina in white-hot form