Lawyers representing the London Harrods London Buling Mohammed Al False.
The victims of Mohammed al -Faye could receive as compensation from 110,000 to £ 200,000, Depending on the willingness they show to undergo a psychiatric evaluation, as informed by MPL Legal, which coordinates a compensation program on behalf of the department store, according to Sky News.
Nominal document that came to the knowledge of the British network reports that people who complain that they were sexually abused by Al Faye, “General damages that are limited to compensation for a sexual assault of up to £ 110,000 may be paid,” an amount of up to £ 15,000 for ‘Impact on work’, relating to the loss of income caused by up to £ 7,500 to women who were forced to undergo unnecessary and interventionist medical examinations.
To plaintiffs who accept to undergo a psychiatrist evaluation could be paid up to £ 200,000 compensation. Harrods spokesman said: “It would be premature for us to comment on the nature and details of a system under consultation.
By the end of the month, the final compensation system is expected to be published and they can access the victims of Al Faye.
In the MLP document reported that it will take up to six months to prepare a medical reportafter which the applicant will have 21 days to ask questions about it.
It is then stated that there will be a compensation for compensation within 35 days, after which the applicant will be able to accept the offer, appeal to an independent committee or abandon the program and seek an alternative form of compensation.
The proposed terms are considered preliminary and are subject to continuous consultations and will not be completed before the end of this month.
If the system is finalized with lines similar to those under consultation, it will probably lead to a total compensation account for Harrods that will amount to tens of millions of pounds.
The London Metropolitan Police asked prosecutors to decide whether to report al -Faye, and for rape and sexual assaults, between 2005 and 2023, who reported 21 Fulham FC players, who also owned Egyptian.
Proofs were presented in 2009 and 2015 to the Public Prosecutor’s Office, but decided not to proceed in either cases because There was no “realistic perspective of condemnation”.
Al Faye bought Harrods for £ 615m in 1985. In 2010 he sold the department store to the Qatar royal family for £ 1.5 billion.