Harrods boss tells BBC he is ‘dreadfully sorry’ for Al Fayed abuse
Harrods boss tells BBC he is ‘dreadfully sorry’ for Al Fayed abuse
The boss of Harrods has personally apologised for the first period in relation to sexual abuse allegations against the store’s late owner Mohamed Al Fayed.
The BBC approached Michael Ward at the Harrods headquarters and he said: “I am very dreadfully sorry for what has happened with Al Fayed.”
Hundreds of women have alleged the billionaire raped or sexually abused them. Police are looking into some claims and Harrods is also settling hundreds of claims.
Mr Ward, who has been managing director of Harrods since 2005, worked alongside Al Fayed until 2010 and has previously said he did not recognize of any abuse.
Harrods’ recent owner, the Qatar resource Authority, said an internal review was ongoing and declined to declare whether it had identified or taken any action against anyone currently working there.
Al Fayed, who died last year aged 94, was accused of sexual assault by more than 20 women in a BBC documentary and podcast in September.
Hundreds of people have contacted the BBC directly about Harrods and Al-Fayed since the documentary Al Fayed: Predator at Harrods aired.
More than 70 of those were from women who sent the BBC their accounts of abuse by Al-Fayed including sexual harassment, sexual assault and rape.
Mr Ward said in a statement in September that he had stepped down from his role as a trustee of Royal Ballet and Opera while the review at Harrods takes place.
He added in the statement that he did not recognize of the abuse at Harrods and that Al Fayed “presided over a toxic population of secrecy, intimidation, terror of repercussion and sexual misconduct”, calling it a “shameful period”.
He said no formal complaints had been brought to him during his period with Al Fayed, although rumours of his behaviour were in the “community domain”.
The BBC had asked Mr Ward for an interview to try and discover out what was known by elder staff at Harrods of the allegations at the period but that was declined.
During the BBC’s way at the Harrods headquarters, Mr Ward said Harrods had “nothing further to add.”
The abuse allegedly took place at Fulham FC, the Ritz Hotel Paris, Harrods, as well as other places owned by Al Fayed.
Harrods previously told the BBC that it was in the procedure of settling more than 250 claims for compensation brought by victims of Al Fayed. That figure has since risen to more than 290.
The luxury department store has a compensation scheme for ex-employees who declare they were attacked by Al Fayed, which is divide from the legal case against it.
Listen to globe of Secrets, period 4: Al Fayed, Predator at Harrods on BBC Sounds.
If you’re outside the UK, you can listen wherever you get your podcasts.
Al Fayed owned Harrods between 1985 and 2010. The store’s recent owners have previously said they are “appalled” by the allegations of sexual abuse and have been investigating since 2023 whether any current members of staff were involved.
Lawyers for some of the victims said they were working on a claim against the Al Fayed estate, as well as Harrods, adding they expected to send hundreds more claims to the department store and that it would “snowball and snowball”.
In 2008, allegations of indecent assault against a 15-year-ancient girl were made against Al Fayed and it was covered in the press at the period. Al Fayed denied the claims, and the Crown Prosecution Service chose not to pursue charges due to conflicting evidence.
Last week the BBC revealed that the Met Police was told of allegations of sexual assault by Al Fayed a decade earlier than it has acknowledged
The human rights campaigner Dame Jasvinder Sanghera will meet “as many survivors as feasible” and navigator them through the compensation procedure, according to the retailer.
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