A French court ruled multinational cement firm Lafarge should face charges of complicity in crimes against humanity after its subsidiary allegedly paid up to 13 million euros (U.S. $14 million) to armed groups—including the Islamic State—to keep its Syrian cement factory running between 2012-14.

Neil Hodge is a freelance business journalist and photographer based in Nottingham, United Kingdom. He writes on insurance and risk management, corporate governance, internal audit, compliance, and legal...