A Qatari ambassador to London was implicated in an attempt to force a British woman in her 50s to have sex and organize a group of vice parties, the Times newspaper revealed on Friday.
A personal assistant at Qatar's embassy in London, Deanne Kingson, 58, a British woman who grew up in Yemen, told the court how Ambassador Fahd al-Mushairi tried to pressure her repeatedly to have sex together before 2014, the newspaper said.
"After she refused to have sex with him, the diplomat intensified his efforts to try to have sex with her then 19-year-old daughter," Kingson said.
The British spoke of "a prominent diplomat at the embassy about pressuring her to organize group sex parties and travel with him to Cuba for a vacation."
The London Labor Court concluded that "Qatari diplomats considered Kingson willing to have sex with the male staff of the embassy, because she was not Muslim."
"Personal assistance was about to be committed because of her ordeal and as a result of sexual pressure and humiliation on the part of the Qataris, who had campaigned fiercely and spitefully against the employee and reached the point of being fired," the court added.
Accordingly, the court awarded Kingson compensation of £388,000 (about half a million dollars).
Kingson is from Acton, west London, where she is fluent in Arabic at the University of Aden, Yemen.
She worked at the Yemeni Embassy in London before moving to the Qatari embassy in 2006, earning £30,000 a year for her work, before being arbitrarily dismissed in 2014.
Kingson, a divorced mother of two, told the court how the Qatari diplomat tried to force her into his suite.
"The ambassador told her the details of a woman's virginity that invited her to chew Khat, in an attempt to sexually provoke her," she said, adding that," after the ambassador understood that she refused to have sex with him, he suggested that she help him marry her daughter."
She said she felt broken by these insinuations, "sexual harassment is one thing and harassment with her innocent teenage daughter is another."
"The diplomat knew that interfering in her family's life in this way would hurt her incredibly," she said.
Ali al-Hajri, a diplomatic adviser at the Qatar Embassy in London, suggested that she organize group sex parties and tried to persuade her to accompany her on a trip to Cuba.
The British employee admitted that she "felt vulnerable and humiliated by this profanity."
According to the official website of the Consulate General of Qatar in Milan, Italy, Al-Mushairi is currently the Consul General and was the "second man" at the Qatar Embassy in London in 2014.
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