We were lambs to the slaughter, says Fayed accuser
Women working at Harrods were like âlambs to the slaughterâ during the years Mohamed Al Fayed was able to use his London department store to carry out abuse at will, one of his accusers has said.
Lindsay was one of five women who shared their story with BBC Breakfast, and discussed the night she says she was drugged and subjected to an attempted rape during a work trip to Paris.
Jen also spoke on the programme, opening up in public for the very first time about her ordeal 35 years on.
Their stories paint a common picture of how Fayedâs behaviour was enabled at Harrods. A growing number of accounts have emerged as part of a major BBC documentary investigation, Al Fayed: Predator at Harrods.
The five accusers urged other women with stories like theirs to come forward.
Lindsay
Sexual assault, harassment, daily groping, trafficking, attempted rape, false imprisonment: that is what Lindsay says her reality was while working for Fayed as a personal assistant for five months in 1989-90.
She has told some of her story before but this morning shared harrowing new details about the night she believes she was drugged and attacked in Paris.
Lindsay recounted having dinner with Fayed, another colleague and three celebrities, when she received a âtap on the shoulder by securityâ and was taken away.
Lindsay assumed she and her colleague were going to accommodation at the Ritz, the exclusive Paris hotel which Fayed also owned.
Instead, she was taken to a flat belonging to his son, Dodi.
âAs you walked in, all the doors locked behind you. I said to the security guy âwhatâs that all aboutâ.
âHe said, âitâs just to keep you safeâ â but it was to make sure you couldnât escape.
âIt was the most terrifying night of my life.â
Lindsay says she has no memory of returning from Paris and sustained significant injuries. She says she was later held in a Harrods office by a colleague under the orders of Fayed.
She managed to escape.
âHarrods will never leave me,â she added.
âThe thoughts, the memories I have from those tragic episodes are inside me.â
Fayed bought Harrods in 1985 and sold it in 2010.
The BBC has unearthed evidence which shows there was a culture of fear at the store during his tenure, a period when he could seemingly act with impunity without his predatory behaviour being challenged.
Its current owners have apologised unreservedly and said his actions were that of âan individual who was intent on abusing his powerâ.
Harrods has also confirmed it is investigating whether any staff still at the store were involved in any of the allegations against Fayed, after the BBC revealed one woman claimed a manager still employed there failed to investigate when she said she had been sexually assaulted.
Lindsay told the BBC that Harrods as a wider organisation needs to be held to account over a system which allowed Fayed to target women.
She added: âWho needs 25 PAs? They enabled this situation and left us like lambs to the slaughter.â
Jen
Jen, who has told her story publicly for the first time after waiving her anonymity, says she was subjected to a number of sexual assaults and attempted rape during five years working for Fayed.
âI have been living with this secret Iâve been deeply ashamed of for 35 years,â she said.
âI havenât told a soul.â
She spoke about how Fayed âstill felt like a threat until the moment he diedâ and how his death in August 2023 âhelped me to be able to come forward without fear of any consequenceâ.
Jen recently told her family about her experience, a conversation she described as âsomething I hoped Iâd never have to doâ.
The accusers who spoke out today were in agreement that Fayedâs modus operandi was to make his victims feel isolated.
âHe made you feel like you were the only person this was happening to,â Jen said.
She recounted how he asked to be called âpapaâ in private.
Fayed would tell her she should âlook upon him as a father figure, that he would protect me and look after meâ.
He provided a flat in Park Lane, central London, for her to stay in on the pretence that she wouldnât have to travel home alone late at night.
Jen later discovered it was fitted with secret cameras.
Katherine
Katherineâs story was heard for the first time in public on BBC Breakfast.
She was hired in 2005 via an outside agency and was initially only told she would be working for a âhigh net worthâ individual.
Soon after meeting Fayed, her new job became a misery.
âThe first week or so was really humiliating. I had the Harrods attire of a black suit and he would call me into his office and tell me âthis doesnât doesnât workâ.
âHe would rip the buttons off the front of my shirt and stuff money into my shirt pocket and tell me to buy more suits. I would come back the next day and he would repeat it and repeat it.â
That first week left Katherine âshatteredâ, and she realised she was in further harmâs way during a work trip to Paris.
âI realised I was in danger there because my door didnât lock, I had to barricade it with a suitcase and a chair.
âUltimately he forced himself upon me in his office. I fought him off and I told him âIâm a PA and a PA only, and thatâs what I doâ.
âHe said âthen you should have worked in the Post Officeâ. The next day my desk was gone and I lost my job.â
Gemma
Gemma worked as a personal assistant for Fayed between 2007 and 2009.
She described how he would become âmore frighteningâ during overseas trips, a pattern several of his accusers have attested to.
Gemma says she was raped during one of those trips in Paris.
She said: âItâs something thatâs probably never going to go away⊠ultimately it feels like Harrods is never going to disappear.â
Like the other women the BBC has spoken to, Gemma fears there may be many more victims of Fayed out there.
She said: âItâs shocking the amount of women whoâve probably been involved over those years.
âIt could be thousands, you just donât know.
âIn my time there must have been hundreds of women who were brought up to the offices and disappeared into meeting rooms and left crying.â
Gemma also spoke about how telling her story had been âhelpfulâ for dealing with that trauma and praised the âamazing supportâ she has received from her co-accusers.
âWeâre getting stronger together, day by day.â
Nicole
A common theme among the stories of women who worked at Harrods is of not realising the danger they were exposed to and the scale of Fayedâs abuse.
Nicole â who was also sharing her story publicly for the first time â said: âI really did feel that people werenât being honest and open but it was a difficult thing to broach.
âI didnât know what was true and wasnât true, there were lots of rumours, people talked.
âBut for me, his reputation was âheâs a bit of a letch, heâs a bit handsyâ â there wasnât the more serious accusations, because thereâs absolutely no way I would have worked for him if that was the case.â
Nicole, who worked for Fayed between 2005 and 2007, also spoke about the fear he instilled among those who worked underneath him: âThere was a palpable anxiety, you could really feel this hum in the airâŠ
âEveryday you had this anxiety⊠[and think] âhow am I going to get through this dayâ.
âIt was a battle to come through the day smiling.â
In a statement released after the BBC aired its documentary, Harrods said it is a very different place under its current ownership.
The store has reached financial settlements with several accusers and says it is committed to agreeing new ones speedily.
Many women are choosing to pursue justice via an alternative legal process. One of the lawyers leading that effort is Dean Armstrong, who said his team has heard from up to 200 women.
He told BBC Breakfast that his legal team are working on assembling a âworldwide claimâ centred on Harrods involving incidents in several countries.
Mr Armstrong said there was a âwhole system to facilitateâ Fayedâs abuse at the store, which gave him the power to threaten women who threatened to speak out.
âI called him a monster last week,â the lawyer added. âI stand by that remark.â
All of the women who shared their stories with the BBC had one more thing in common: they urged others out there who may have been attacked at Harrods to come forward.
Jen assured victims who have not shared their experience that they would be listened to and supported, and urged them to speak to someone.
âWe canât hold him to account because heâs dead â but we can make sure that people know the truth about this man,â she added.
âHe was not a gregarious, charity-giving clown â he was a dangerous sexual predator.â
A BBC investigation into allegations of rape and attempted rape by Mohamed Al Fayed, the former owner of Harrods. Did the luxury store protect a billionaire predator?
Listen to World of Secrets, Season 4: Al Fayed, Predator at Harrods on BBC Sounds. If youâre outside the UK, you can listen wherever you get your podcasts, external.