Veterans
Related: About this forumWounded Vets & Widows Say Big Pharma Funded Terror in Iraq
WASHINGTON (CN) Sixty-six families of U.S. troops killed or wounded in Iraq sued some of the worlds biggest pharmaceutical companies Tuesday, claiming they paid millions of dollars in bribes to officials in Iraqs Health Ministry for lucrative contracts, which financed the Iran-backed Shiite Mahdi Army.
The federal lawsuit, filed by attorneys with Figel & Frederick and Sparacino & Andreson, claims that industry giants lead defendant Astrazeneca, Pfizer, GE Healthcare, Johnson & Johnson, Hoffman-La Roche, Genentech, Wyeth and others knew that money from their bribes would finance the terrorist Shiite Mahdi Army, which killed and injured thousands of Americans in Iraq.
After late 2004, companies selling medical goods to MOH [Iraqs Ministry of Health] were dealing with a counterparty that was not a genuine medical institution; it was a de facto terrorist group, the complaint states.
The 203 page lawsuit claims the Mahdi Army used the money to fund militia attacks on U.S. troops, and worked closely with Hezbollah, a Lebanese political and military group that the U.S. designates as a terrorist organization.
To break into the Iraq market after the U.S. invasion in 2003, Western companies had to pay commissions
an Iraqi euphemism for bribes, worth 20 percent of a contracts value, according to the complaint.
https://www.courthousenews.com/wounded-vets-widows-say-big-pharma-funded-terror-iraq/
Not Ruth
(3,613 posts)lunasun
(21,646 posts)Victor_c3
(3,557 posts)Corporations and big business in general has a not-so-good history when it comes to ethics and doing the right thing in general. When a corporation is involved in wrongdoing nobody goes to jail and they get to write-off fines and penalties as losses on their taxes.