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BackHome Office first recognises Al Fayed abuse victim as modern slavery case
Home Office first recognises Al Fayed abuse victim as modern slavery case
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BBC News29.04.2026Crime2 dk okuma

Home Office first recognises Al Fayed abuse victim as modern slavery case

Rachael Louw receives positive 'conclusive grounds' decision from government trafficking mechanism, with at least three other women expecting similar rulings

En resumen

  • The Home Office has for the first time formally recognised a woman abused by former Harrods owner Mohamed Al Fayed as a victim of modern slavery.
  • Rachael Louw, who waived her right to anonymity, was trafficked and suffered abuse at the hands of Al Fayed and his brother Salah over a three-year period in the UK and France.
  • She received a positive 'conclusive grounds' decision from the National Referral Mechanism, with at least three other women linked to Al Fayed abuse expecting similar rulings.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

Hundreds of women have accused Mohamed Al Fayed, who owned Harrods between 1985 and 2010, of rape, sexual assault and trafficking. He died in 2023 aged 94 having never faced charges. His brother Salah died in 2010. The NRM was introduced in 2009 to identify potential victims of exploitation and human trafficking.

Tamaño de fuente

The Home Office has for the first time formally acknowledged that a woman who was abused by Mohamed Al Fayed was a victim of modern slavery, the BBC understands.

Rachael Louw, who has waived her right to anonymity, was trafficked and suffered abuse at the hands of the former Harrods owner and his brother Salah. She says she feels "vindication" and "validation" that her case has been recognised by the British government.

The BBC has spoken to at least three other women who have made applications to the government's National Referral Mechanism (NRM) for modern slavery, and are expecting similar rulings soon.

Where an individual receives what's known as a positive "conclusive grounds" decision, they are considered to be a confirmed victim of modern slavery. Legal experts say such a decision lends credibility to witnesses in a criminal court and may have an impact on the way police investigate a case.

The Modern Slavery Act, which came into force in 2015, defines human trafficking as arranging or facilitating the travel of another person within a country or across borders for the purposes of that person being exploited.

Hundreds of women have accused Al Fayed, who owned the luxury Harrods store in London between 1985 and 2010, of rape, sexual assault and trafficking. Several women have made the same allegations against his brother Salah Fayed.

Mohamed Al Fayed died in 2023 aged 94 having never faced any charges. Salah Fayed died in 2010.

For Louw, the decision comes as the first step in bringing to justice those whom she says facilitated the trafficking and abuse.

"It was an odd feeling to feel positive about an acknowledgement of something that was so intrinsically negative," she says. "But it is vindication and validation."

The NRM was introduced in 2009 as a way to identify potential victims of exploitation, human trafficking and modern slavery. "First responders" including police officers, social workers and charity workers can refer an individual to the NRM if they suspect such abuse has taken place.

The Home Office makes an initial so-called "reasonable grounds" decision if it believes a crime may have occurred before investigating further and making a final "conclusive grounds" decision.

Louw's final determination says the Home Office found she had been subjected to sexual exploitation in the UK and in multiple areas of France over a three-year period.

The BBC understands at least five women linked to Al Fayed abuse have been granted positive "reasonable grounds" decisions, the first stage in the process, and are awaiting final decisions. These were all referred by the anti-slavery charity Unseen.

Louw says she wouldn't have been able to go through with the process without the support she received from the survivor campaign group No One Above, who then worked closely with Unseen to make the referral.

She reported her case to the Metropolitan Police in 2024 but felt the force never took the trafficking elements of the case seriously and should have referred her case to the NRM.

A spokesperson for No One Above said: "The government has recognised what survivors and experts said from the start: this was trafficking. NOA campaigned tirelessly for this - because only a trafficking investigation can gather the evidence needed for meaningful accountability."

The Met Police said it had broadened its Al Fayed abuse investigation to include human trafficking. It is understood to have strengthened its team with officers with a background in modern slavery and will contact victims who it feels could be referred.

Qué observar

Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos

  • More women will receive positive conclusive grounds decisions in the coming weeks

    Muy probable · En semanas

  • Metropolitan Police will refer additional victims to the NRM

    Muy probable · En semanas

  • Criminal investigation will expand to include more facilitators

    Probable · En meses

Preguntas abiertas

  • Will criminal charges be brought against any facilitators of the trafficking?
  • How many more women will receive positive conclusive grounds decisions?
  • Will the Metropolitan Police investigation lead to prosecutions?

Temas relacionados

This article was originally published by BBC News.

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