A SIXTH alleged victim who claims to have been sexually harassed and bullied by businessman Sir Philip Green has come forward to MPs.

The woman contacted veteran Labour member Frank Field to ask for Parliament’s protection.

Mr Field — who chairs the Commons Work and Pensions Committee — said she wanted to go public about her allegations, but feared what the Topshop tycoon’s lawyers would do. The campaigning MP said: “People should know they can come to us and give evidence safely.”

Mr Field’s powerful committee led an inquiry into Sir Philip’s role in the collapse of store chain BHS and its pension scheme.

The MP told The Sun last night: “I have been talking this evening with somebody who witnessed grotesque bullying at work.

“They would like what they witnessed to be shared, through the House of Commons, with the nation.

“I am seeking to raise urgently with the Government the importance of having a mechanism in Parliament through which the voices of victims of abuse can be heard.

“This would develop the role of the House of Commons in a way which stands up for people who have little money, against those who have much.”

Mr Field has been Green’s greatest opponent since news of the BHS pensions scandal first broke.

The 76-year-old MP led a series of inquiries into the retailer’s 2016 collapse and the £571million black hole in its pension fund which emerged a year later.

He was instrumental in forcing Green to pay £363million to the fund out of his own pocket last year.

Mr Field also led calls for the tycoon to be stripped of his knighthood.

He once said the billionaire was “much worse” than the crooked media magnate Robert Maxwell, who plundered millions from his company pension funds before his death in 1991. As a result, Green threatened to sue Mr Field and demanded an apology through the law firm Schillings.

The extraordinary grudge match seemed to have cooled when Green called for a truce in a letter he sent to Mr Field in March.

Meanwhile, other MPs lampooned Sir Philip last night for spending a reported £500,000 in a failed attempt to keep his identity secret.

Tory party deputy chair James Cleverly tweeted: “People must now realise that injunctions and super-injunctions are nothing more than a good way to part with large sums of money and a bad way to keep things secret.”

But Downing Street refused to enter the fray. The PM’s official spokesman said only: “It is not appropriate for me to comment while the case is ongoing.

“The rules of privilege are a matter for Parliament.”