McDonald's has fired 18 workers since a BBC investigation uncovered hundreds of allegations of harassment at the restaurant chain, its UK boss has said.

Alistair Macrow told MPs the firm had received 407 employee complaints since July and investigated 157 to date.

While people have been sacked, Mr Macrow did not know how many complaints had been referred to the police. A BBC investigation found that workers as young as 17 were being groped and harassed almost routinely.

They said they experienced a toxic workplace culture where claims of sexual assault, racism and bullying were not taken seriously. Mr Macrow told the Business and Trade Select Committee that McDonald's UK was receiving between one and two complaints of sexual harassment a week.

Following the BBC's initial report in the summer, Mr Macrow set up an investigation handling unit to filed complaints. Since then, more than 400 have been made but more than half have yet to be fully investigated.

Of the 157 that have been looked into, Mr Macrow said 17 complaints were about sexual harassment, nine related to bullying and one was about racial harassment. The fast-food chain is one of the biggest private sector employers in the UK. It has more than 170,000 people working in 1,450 restaurants.

According to Mr Macrow, 89% of its restaurants in the UK are operated by franchisees. But he admitted that no franchisees had yet lost their contracts due to claims of harassment and abuse. Mr Macrow said the testimony from workers had been “truly horrific” and “very difficult to hear”.

— CutC by bbc.com

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