Victims of Lebanon's deadly 2020 port blast have filed a quarter-billion-dollar lawsuit against a US firm for its suspected links to the tragedy, a Swiss foundation assisting the plaintiffs said Wednesday.
The nine plaintiffs are all US citizens and include Sarah Copland, the mother of two-year-old Isaac Copland, who was one of the explosion's youngest victims.
The blast -- described as one of the largest non-nuclear explosion in recent history -- killed more than 200 people, wounded thousands and ravaged entire neighborhoods.
The cataclysmic explosion happened when what was left of the 2,750-ton stock of ammonium nitrate stored at the port for seven years caught fire.
It remains unclear what caused the fire, but victims want the officials whose negligence and corruption allowed the hazardous material to remain poorly stored for years to face justice.
Accountability Now said in a statement that the claim was filed this week in Texas against US-Norwegian geophysical services group TGS.
The company owns British firm Spectrum Geo, which a decade ago chartered the Rhosus ship, which was carrying the ammonium nitrate that was subsequently unloaded at Beirut port and exploded on August 4, 2020.
Accountability Now said Spectrum had "entered into a series of highly profitable but suspicious contracts with the ministry of energy of Lebanon" to transport seismic survey equipment from Lebanon allegedly to Jordan aboard the Rhosus.
The minister at the time was Gebran Bassil, President Michel Aoun's son-in-law, who has denied any wrongdoing in connection with the explosion.
Spectrum had chartered the derelict Moldovan-flagged Rhosus but the ship never actually set sail.
The Lebanese investigation into the blast has faced systematic and blatant political obstruction from day one.
The probe has been delayed for months now as a result of lawsuits filed against them by former ministers and those close to influential parties, including Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri and former Minister Suleiman Franjieh.
The lead counsel in the "strict liability" case is US firm Ford O'Brien Landy LLP, and Accountability Now's lawyer Zena Wakim said TGS's response should be known "in the coming months".
"This lawsuit is a first. It's a way of circumventing the obstruction that the investigation has faced in Lebanon," Wakim told AFP.
"The evidence that will be generated by this lawsuit can also benefit the Lebanese investigation," she said. "The spirit of the claim is to benefit all the victims."