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BNP Paribas Sudan Case: Billions in Potential Compensation Risk

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

BNP Paribas Faces Potential Billions in Compensation Over Sudan ‌Operations, Stock Plummets

Paris – Shares in ⁣BNP Paribas plunged as much as 10% today, closing down 8% at €69 – a six-month low – after a U.S. federal court found teh⁢ French banking giant liable for “facilitating” genocide carried‍ out by the Sudanese regime between the late 1990s and 2011. The ruling, delivered by a Manhattan court,‌ stems from allegations that BNP Paribas provided‌ financial services that allowed the⁣ government of Omar al-Bashir too bypass U.S. sanctions and fund violent campaigns.

A jury initially awarded $20.5 million in⁢ damages to⁣ three plaintiffs – Sudanese refugees now American citizens – who were direct victims of atrocities ‍committed in Darfur and the⁤ Nuba Mountains. However, the financial fallout for BNP Paribas could be far⁢ more ample.

victims’⁣ lawyers argue the verdict opens the door to a potential class-action lawsuit involving approximately 23,000⁣ Sudanese refugees currently residing in ‌the United States. Estimates ‌suggest the bank‍ could face a theoretical liability of up to $150 billion in‍ total compensation. The news also contributed to broader concerns in⁣ the European banking sector, coinciding with‌ a downgrade of France’s sovereign credit rating by S&P, ⁤pushing it below the “double A” threshold.

This ‍isn’t the first time ⁢BNP Paribas has faced scrutiny for its dealings with ⁣sanctioned entities. In 2014, ‌the bank agreed to pay $8.97 billion in fines for conducting transactions with sanctioned subjects in⁢ Sudan, Iran, and Cuba – an agreement that avoided a criminal trial but established a precedent of responsibility.

BNP Paribas has ‍announced⁣ its intention to appeal the recent ruling, stating the verdict “is manifestly wrong and ignores some ‍notable pieces of ​evidence that ‍the ⁢bank was not authorized to present.”

The ‌initial lawsuit was ‍filed in 2016, dismissed⁤ in 2018, and afterward reopened by the federal Court of Appeal a year ⁣later. the case highlights the increasing legal risks faced by financial institutions accused of indirectly supporting human rights abuses‌ through their international operations.

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