logo
Harrods' ex-owner allegedly abused hundreds of women. Some Australian survivors say he had help

Harrods' ex-owner allegedly abused hundreds of women. Some Australian survivors say he had help

SBS Australia17-05-2025

Former Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed is alleged to have sexually assaulted hundreds of women. More survivors have come forward after his death in 2023. Source: Channel 4 Watch Dateline's latest episode 'Delivered to a Predator' on 20 May at 9:30pm AEST on SBS or SBS On Demand. Content warning: This article contains references to sexual assault and rape. Australian Rebecca (not her real name) had been working on the shop floor at Harrods, a luxury department store in London, for only two weeks when a senior employee approached her and told her she had scored 100 per cent in a secret shopper survey. As a reward, Rebecca received a £50 gift voucher and the chance to meet the chairman of Harrods at the time, Mohamed Al Fayed. The Egyptian billionaire, who lived most of his life and built his wealth in the United Kingdom, owned Harrods until 2010. The senior employee, Kelly Walker-Duncalf, escorted Rebecca into Al Fayed's office and left the two alone. "I was gripped by the chairman on the face and kissed on the lips," Rebecca recalls 19 years later, her voice trembling. "I was shocked. I didn't know if it was a cultural greeting. I was just naive. I was 22 and had no idea what I was in for." She says Al Fayed wanted her to work in his office as one of his personal assistants and gave her £800 in cash to buy work clothes.
That year, in 2005, Rebecca started working as a PA in Al Fayed's office, mostly shadowing other PAs, and says she was never tasked with anything of substance. Until one day, she was asked to deliver a package to Al Fayed at his apartment in one of London's most expensive neighbourhoods, Mayfair. "There was on the bed, handbags, dresses, shoes," she recalls. "And a comment was made [that] all of this could be mine if I play by the rules. I was asked to remove his shoes." She says soon Al Fayed was on top of her, raping her, as she asked him to stop.
Stories of young women being taken to Al Fayed's office circulated in the company at the time. But it was only after the billionaire's death in 2023 at the age of 94 that the full scale of his abuse of women came to light. He is alleged to have sexually assaulted hundreds of women. Many survivors who came forward with the allegations , and some former Harrods staff, point to one woman who is alleged to have made his abuse possible for years: Walker-Duncalf. She is alleged to have used her senior position at Harrods from 2004 to recruit young women for Al Fayed. She left the company in 2013, three years after Al Fayed sold it to new owners.
Barrister Dean Armstrong is representing some of the survivors. "The name that comes up as someone who was facilitating the introductions, putting them into a position where abuse could take place, was Kelly Walker-Duncalf," he says. "Her name came up at least 50 per cent of the time." Through her lawyer, Walker-Duncalf said that she did not, at any stage, "facilitate" or "enable" any of Al Fayed's crimes.
According to her CV, Walker-Duncalf joined the Harrods shopfloor in 1997. She worked her way up to becoming the head of store approvals, the department that vetted new recruits, in 2004. Former employees allege that she used her position to scout for young women for Al Fayed for sexual purposes.
Anne-Marie was 21 when she got a job at the store approvals at Harrods in 2005 and worked closely with Walker-Duncalf for nearly a year. "When I was working in reception, she had said to me early on:''Please send any attractive candidates that you see directly to my office'," she recalls. "Attractive blondes was a real focus for her." Anne-Marie, who now lives in Australia, says Walker-Duncalf would take Polaroid photos of some candidates, pin them on a board, and regularly take the photos up to Al Fayed.
"She was the second most important person in Harrods. She may not have had the power on paper, but she had a degree of power that nobody else in the store had." Anne-Marie witnessed what she describes as a constant flow of young women being sent to Al Fayed's office. "She would have sent hundreds of girls up to his office," she says. One day, her turn came to meet the chairman in person. She says the first time he sexually assaulted her he kissed her on the mouth, and on one occasion tried to rape her.
"Only when something had happened to me, I sort of put two and two together and realised that she was sending up those girls and young women as prey for Al Fayed," she says. Asked whether she considered reporting the incident, Anne-Marie says: "there was very much a culture of fear and intimidation that existed within Harrods". Former staff say that during Al Fayed's ownership of Harrods, high-level security and surveillance created a climate of fear at the company, protecting not only him but Walker-Duncalf too.
But some women did report Al Fayed and Walker-Duncalf to the police. In 2013, Francesca was 20 and had recently moved to London looking for a job in fashion, when a mutual friend introduced her to Walker-Duncalf, who had just left her job at Harrods. Walker-Duncalf told her that Al Fayed was looking for a PA, and the two women drove to his office. Francesca says he raped her the evening they met. She went to the police the next morning.
As the police investigated her allegations and ran medical examinations, Francesca felt ashamed and terrified that he or his people would come after her. Two weeks after first reporting the rape, she withdrew her complaint. But in 2015, she asked the police to reopen the case. In a few months, she received a letter from the Crown Prosecution Service informing her there was not enough evidence to prove that the sex was non-consensual. "It's been really hard to rebuild myself after that happened to me, and it's been a long, long process," Francesca says. A spokesperson for the Crown Prosecution Service said the agency was improving its standard of communication and wants "anyone affected by sexual offences to come forward with confidence they will be treated with compassion and respect." "In this case, the prosecutors who looked at the files of evidence concluded there was no realistic prospect of conviction and no charges were brought," the statement read. "We are determined to secure justice in as many rape and serious sexual offences as possible.
London's Metropolitan Police now admits that between 2005 and 2023, it received 21 reports of sexual abuse against Al Fayed, but no charges were ever brought. Police now believe that number to be more than 100. A Metropolitan Police spokesperson urged "anyone with information, whether they were directly affected by Mohamed Al Fayed's actions or aware of others who may have been involved, or committed offences, to come forward". Harrods is now under new management and a spokesperson also encouraged all survivors "to make their claims to the Harrods scheme, where they can apply for compensation as well as support through an independent survivor advocate". If you or someone you know is impacted by sexual assault, call 1800RESPECT on 1800 737 732, text 0458 737 732, or visit . In an emergency, call 000.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TotalEnergies on trial in landmark greenwashing case in France
TotalEnergies on trial in landmark greenwashing case in France

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

TotalEnergies on trial in landmark greenwashing case in France

French oil and gas giant TotalEnergies goes on trial in Paris on Thursday over allegations of misleading climate claims, an unprecedented "greenwashing" case against a fossil fuel firm in France. The civil case stems from a March 2022 lawsuit by three environmental groups accusing the French energy giant of "misleading commercial practices" for saying it could reach carbon neutrality while continuing oil and gas production. Starting in May 2021, TotalEnergies advertised its goal of "carbon neutrality by 2050" and touted gas as "the fossil fuel with the lowest greenhouse gas emissions". At the time, the company had also changed its name from Total to TotalEnergies to emphasise its investments in low-carbon energy, such as electricity. The plaintiffs have logged around 40 "false advertisements" in their lawsuit. The ads "don't sincerely reflect the reality of TotalEnergies' operations", Apolline Cagnat, a legal counsel at Greenpeace, told AFP. Cagnat said the NGOs want the court to send a "strong signal" to fossil fuel companies by ordering "an immediate stop, under penalty, of the misleading commercial practices". TotalEnergies disputes the charges, insisting the messages are part of its institutional communication, regulated by financial authorities -- not consumer law. It argues no consumer organisation is party to the case, and that the NGOs are misusing consumer protection rules to challenge its corporate strategy. Environmental groups in recent years have turned to the courts to establish case law on companies misleading consumers by appearing more eco-friendly than they are. In Europe, courts ruled against Dutch airline KLM in 2024 and Germany's Lufthansa in March over misleading consumers about their efforts to reduce the environmental impact of flying. In Spain, utility Iberdrola failed to secure a conviction against Spanish oil and gas company Repsol over similar allegations of "false" environmental claims. A greenwashing case against Australian oil and gas producer Santos, challenging its claim to be a "clean fuels" company, has been ongoing since 2021. Based on a European Union directive targeting unfair commercial practices, the TotalEnergies lawsuit is the first time a French court has heard such a case against a fossil fuel company. The NGOs said the Paris court will rule, for the first time in the world, on the legality of ads presenting gas as essential to the energy transition. Climate experts say methane leaks from the gas industry have a powerful warming effect on the atmosphere. TotalEnergies maintains it has not engaged in misleading commercial practices. The company says it plans to show that its messages "about its name change, strategy and role in the energy transition are reliable and based on objective, verifiable data". nal/ak/lth/gil

‘Ashamed': TV reporter claims Sean ‘Diddy' Combs drugged and raped her on a tour bus
‘Ashamed': TV reporter claims Sean ‘Diddy' Combs drugged and raped her on a tour bus

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

‘Ashamed': TV reporter claims Sean ‘Diddy' Combs drugged and raped her on a tour bus

A reporter has accused Sean 'Diddy' Combs of drugging and raping her after she tried to get an interview in the midst of his sex trafficking trial. Kathi Steininger claimed she was set to tell her dark story on the stand, but broke her anonymity after she was dismissed, The US Sun reported. Combs, 55, is accused of hiring prostitutes as perverse entertainment for his so-called 'freak offs,' which were sex parties that had a roster of high-profile guests. He would allegedly ply attendees and sex workers with drugs before filming them in compromising positions, and use the tapes as blackmail. At the centre of the charges is his relationship with ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, who broke the story wide open when she sued the mega producer in November 2023. In that suit, she accused her ex-lover of raping and beating her, as well as forcing her to take part in the sometimes days-long freak-offs. After the lawsuit was filed and settled out of court, dozens of alleged victims came forward with legal complaints of their own, where they described harrowing brushes with the rapper. Now, Steininger, who is an Austrian national, has claimed in an interview that she was also targeted by the mega producer when she was just 19 years old. In March 2000, the budding journalist scored an on-camera interview with Combs during his European tour, she told Austrian broadcaster PULS 24 on Monday. But at some point during the chat, she claims she was separated from her cameraman and given a drink by Combs, which she believes was drugged. The next thing she knew, the then-teenager was allegedly on the back of a tour bus being raped by the musician. She said she felt too out of it to move or cry for help. 'There was 100 percent something in it,' she said of the drink. 'I would never have gone to bed with that man.' After the alleged attack, she said she felt too 'ashamed' to tell anyone. Steininger claimed she was going to take the stand as part of Combs' ongoing trial, but said her story was out of the statute of limitations because she and Diddy were overseas. After getting that news, she chose to break her anonymity and join the growing chorus of women and men urging for justice. The accuser claimed the alleged attack left her with post-traumatic stress disorder and that she was unable to work. She's reached out to prosecutors in Austria to pursue charges, but because the alleged attack was so long ago, it's also considered outside the statute of limitations. However, she claims that state attorneys told her they would re-examine the case based on the results of Combs' sex trafficking trial. 'I want some kind of punishment for what he did to me,' she said. The US Sun has reached out to Combs' spokesperson for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store