Mohammed al Fayed: After 420 women, 12 men accuse the former Harrods boss of sexual abuse

There are no complaints against the former Harrods. After hundreds of complaints from women, 12 men now accuse of . Men argue that they were victims of sexual abuse and intimidation and by Mohammed Al Fayed and some of them say they suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and mental injuries due to their experiences. Their complaints come to be added to those These accusations were put forward by the Harrods Survivors’ Justice for Harrods. Many of the men “have moved on to similar complaints of intimidation, humiliation, unfair dismissal or relegation due to Al Fagent,” he told British The source. “In some cases they were forced out of work after talking openly about their traumatic experiences,” he added. BBC Documentary revealed last September that Al Fayed, who died last year at the age of 94, sexually abused his female employees at the Harrods department store in London, forced them to undergo medical examinations and threatened to suffer the consequences if they tried to denounce him. The Metropolitan Police of the British capital investigates 60 reports of sexual abuse and that of Surrey another for assault. Many media had referred to allegations of sexual abuse of women by Al Fagent prior to the BBC documentary, such as Vanity Fair in 1995, ITV in 1997 and Channel 4 in 2017, while corresponding complaints were also included in a non-approved biography, co-written by journalist Tom Bauer. Lawyers said in September that many of the women felt comfortable talking to the BBC only after Al Fagent’s death. In addition to the same Al Fayed many women working in Harrods Harrods, now in Qatar, expressed their “disturbment” over complaints against Al Fayed and asked “honestly” apology from his victims, while a compensation programme has been launched.