Harrods’ closure of compensation scheme for survivors of alleged sexual abuse called ‘neither fair nor just’
Harrods is facing criticism for closing its compensation scheme for survivors of alleged sexual abuse by its former owner, Mohamed Al Fayed, on March 31st. KP Law, representing nearly 280 survivors, argues the closure is premature, occurring before Harrods completes its internal investigation into the allegations, which date back to 1977.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHarrods is facing criticism for closing its compensation scheme for survivors of alleged sexual abuse by its former owner, Mohamed Al Fayed, on March 31st. KP Law, representing nearly 280 survivors, argues the closure is premature, occurring before Harrods completes its internal investigation into the allegations, which date back to 1977. The law firm suggests financial considerations are driving the decision, urging Harrods to delay the closure and publish its investigation findings. Harrods, which established the scheme in March of last year after a BBC documentary highlighted the allegations, states over 220 people engaged with the scheme, with compensation already paid to over 70 survivors. While Harrods claims the scheme was designed with survivor input and aims for resolution without lengthy legal battles, critics argue survivors are being pressured to make decisions without full information.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe Metropolitan police said 111 women had made allegations against Fayed.
Compensation had been paid to more than 70 survivors.
Harrods said more than 220 people had engaged with the redress scheme.
KP Law, representing nearly 280 survivors, questioned the closure of the scheme before an internal investigation was completed.
Harrods is closing a compensation scheme for survivors of alleged sexual abuse by Mohamed Al Fayed.