Firm banned disabled woman from shop floor

LONDON – A law student with a prosthetic arm told an employment tribunal yesterday she “questioned her worth as a human being…

LONDON – A law student with a prosthetic arm told an employment tribunal yesterday she “questioned her worth as a human being” after she was forced to work in the stockroom of US clothing retailer Abercrombie & Fitch because she did not fit its strict “look policy”.

Riam Dean (22), who was born with her left forearm missing, said she was granted special permission to wear a cardigan to cover the join in her arm, but was later removed from the shop floor and made to work in the stockroom because the cardigan did not adhere to the strict dress code.

Miss Dean told the tribunal she felt “taunted” when her manager told her she could return to the shop floor of the firm’s flagship store on London’s Savile Row if she removed the cardigan.

She said: “I felt personally diminished, humiliated and could not argue a point I could never win.” Miss Dean, who has just finished her final exams at Queen Mary University of London, is seeking damages for disability discrimination at an employment tribunal in central London.

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She told the hearing she would have stayed with the company until her law qualification was complete, had she not been “bullied” out of her job. Miss Dean added that, when she left the company, she “wasn’t the same person”.

“I was always prepared for children to be curious about my disability, but to be faced with adult bullying, no one could have prepared me for such debasement.”

Abercrombie & Fitch has yet to respond to the allegations in the tribunal but last night a spokeswoman for the company said Miss Dean’s portrayal of what occurred was “inaccurate”.

Akash Nawbatt, representing Abercrombie & Fitch, argued that Miss Dean “exaggerated” the effect her experience with the company had on her.

Mr Nawbatt said that problems Miss Dean experienced after leaving the firm could be attributed to long-standing issues.

The tribunal was adjourned until today.