Published: 14 April 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
Survivors of the late Mohamed Al Fayed have issued a powerful call for justice, demanding that the network of enablers who facilitated decades of systemic abuse at Harrods be held legally and professionally accountable. As the high-profile Harrods Redress Scheme officially closed its doors to new applicants on 31 March 2026, a group of brave women returned to the iconic Knightsbridge department store to stage a protest, marking a poignant and painful milestone in their pursuit of the truth. While Harrods has expressed deep regret and paid out millions in compensation to over 200 claimants, survivors argue that financial settlements alone cannot replace the need for a full public inquiry and criminal prosecutions of those who looked the other way or actively assisted in the late tycoon’s predatory behavior.
The scale of the scandal, which first broke into the mainstream following a harrowing documentary in 2024, has continued to expand over the last two years. The Metropolitan Police have now documented allegations from at least 111 women and girls, with some victims as young as 13 at the time of the abuse. Despite Al Fayed’s death in 2023 at the age of 94, the investigation has shifted its focus toward the “culture of secrecy and intimidation” that flourished under his leadership. Survivors like Lindsay Mason and Jen Mills, who have waived their anonymity to lead the “Justice for Fayed and Harrods Survivors” (J4FHS) campaign, claim they were part of a “conveyor belt” of young women fed into a toxic environment where security teams and executive staff were allegedly used to monitor, trap, and silence victims.
In the weeks leading up to today’s developments, the Metropolitan Police interviewed several individuals under caution, including three women in their 40s, 50s, and 60s, regarding allegations of human trafficking and the facilitation of rape. These interviews represent a critical turning point for survivors who have long insisted that Al Fayed did not act in isolation. The J4FHS group is now applying direct pressure on the Prime Minister, seeking a meeting to advocate for a statutory public inquiry. They argue that Harrods’ internal investigation remains insufficient, particularly as the store’s current management—who are overseeing the redress scheme—are seen by some as “marking their own homework” rather than providing a truly independent audit of the company’s historic failures.
Controversy has also emerged regarding the “small print” of the compensation agreements. Several survivors have raised alarms over clauses that require claimants to assist Harrods in recovering costs from Al Fayed’s multi-billion-pound estate. Legal representatives for the victims have criticized these terms as “strange and opportunistic,” suggesting they shift the burden of recovery onto the very people the company failed to protect. While Harrods maintains that the redress scheme was designed to offer a faster, less traumatic alternative to lengthy court battles, critics point out that the closure of the scheme before the conclusion of the store’s own internal probe is “neither fair nor just,” as it forces survivors to make life-altering legal decisions without a full understanding of who within the organization was complicit.
As the sun sets over the grand facade of Harrods today, the message from the gathered survivors is clear: the end of a compensation deadline does not signal the end of the quest for justice. The focus has moved beyond the grave of a single predator to the living institutions and individuals who allowed him to operate with impunity for nearly four decades. With the Metropolitan Police’s “Operation Greenlight” continuing to gather evidence and international police forces in France also investigating trafficking claims, the “Al Fayed enablers” face a growing storm of scrutiny. For the women who stood in the rain outside the store today, true closure will only come when those who built and maintained the “predatory machine” are forced to answer for their roles in a courtroom.



























































































