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Sara Sharif’s dad and stepmum guilty of murder after ‘campaign of abuse’

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Sara was found dead at home after her father Urfan called police to say he had ‘beat her up too much’ for being ‘naughty’ (Picture: Surrey Police/PA)

Sara Sharif’s father and stepmother have been found guilty of murder after subjecting her to a horrific ‘campaign of abuse’ that eventually killed her.

The 10-year-old suffered more than 70 injuries shortly before her broken body was found at home in Woking, Surrey, following a call from her dad Urfan Sharif, 42, in Pakistan saying he had ‘beat her up too much’ for being ‘naughty’.

Jurors at the Old Bailey heard how she was ‘serially and severely’ beaten with a cricket bat and metal pole – right up until her dying moments. She had also been burned with an iron, scalded with boiling water and bitten.

Even more disturbing evidence of the attempts to ‘punish and control’ Sara revealed she was forced to wear nappies, bound with packing tape and had her head covered by ‘dreadful’ homemade hoods for extended periods.

Mr Justice Cavanagh adjourned sentencing until next Tuesday, telling jurors the case had been ‘extremely stressful and traumatic’.

The convictions raise questions about the past involvement of the family court and social services in Sara’s case.

Children’s Commissioner Dame Rachel de Souza called for change and said the case highlighted ‘profound weaknesses in our child protection system’.

She said: ‘Sara’s death must also bring about an immediate shift in how we protect children like her.’

Urfan Sharif called police when he arrived in Islamabad and confessed he had beaten her up ‘too much’ (Picture: Surrey Police/PA)
Jurors heard Beinash Batool would call her husband home to ‘sort Sara out’ (Picture: Surrey Police/PA)
The court heard Faisal Malik knew what was being done to Sara but did nothing to help (Picture: Surrey Police/PA)
Sara singing and playing a guitar (Picture: Surrey Police/PA)
The couple speaking while on the run in Pakistan, when Batool callously referred to Sara’s death as an ‘incident’ (Picture: Surrey Police/PA)

Sara’s dad, stepmum Beinash Batool, 30, and uncle Faisal Malik, 29, all fled the country within hours of her death on August 8 last year, paying thousands for a flight to Islamabad.

The schoolgirl’s body was found in a bunkbed at their home two days later alongside a note from Sharif saying he ‘killed [his] daughter by beating’.

Bill Emlyn Jones KC, prosecuting, said: ‘Poor Sara Sharif was brutally mistreated, abused and violently assaulted over a long period. It had been going on for years.

‘For the last eight months of her life when the level of violence grew to the point it ultimately cost her her life there were three adults living in the house with her.

The 10-year-old’s post-mortem examination showed she endured ‘multiple and extensive injuries’ (Picture: PA)

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‘None of them even reported Sara’s abuse or agony or suffering to any outside agency who could have intervened. No injury was reported to or shown to a doctor or staff at school. No outside help was called.

‘And it is worse than that because there were positive steps taken to cover the abuse up throughout those months.

‘None of the defendants did anything to stop what was happening to Sara as surely as they would have done if they had not been complicit in its happening.’

Sharif and Batool were both found guilty of murder. Malik was found guilty of causing or allowing Sara’s death.

Stepmum’s heartless reply when asked by detectives: ‘Do you love Sara?

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Sara Sharif’s stepmum replied ‘no comment’ when asked by police whether she loved or cared about the 10-year-old, a newly released video has showed.

After the verdicts, police released videos showing all three defendants being interviewed on September 14, 2023, the day after they were arrested at Gatwick Airport after flying back from Pakistan.

In a 68-second clip, Batool replies ‘No comment’ to seven questions from officers, including ‘Do you love Sara?’, ‘Did you care about her at all?’, ‘What did you see?’ and ‘What happened to Sara?’.

At the start of the video Batool, wearing a black long-sleeved garment and smiling slightly, confirms her identity and responds ‘killing someone’, when asked what her understanding was of murder.

Another video shows Malik replying ‘no comment’ when asked by police who was responsible for the girl’s death and when an officer explains that she thinks he was either ‘actively involved’ in torturing Sara or was ‘sat there going “it’s not my problem, I can’t do anything”’.

Taxi driver Sharif is seen in a separate clip providing a handwriting sample of the words ‘love you Sara, maybe I will be back before you finish the post-mortem’, almost the same words that were in a note found next to the girl’s body.

Asked by police what he can tell them about the note, Sharif replies ‘No comment’. Wearing a white polo shirt and jeans, he sat with his arms folded.

In his call to police while on the run, Sharif told the operator: ‘I’ve killed my daughter. I legally punished her, and she died. She was naughty. I beat her up. It wasn’t my intention to kill her, but I beat her up.’

Mr Emlyn Jones told jurors Sharif’s description in that call ‘came nowhere near to describing the extent of the violence and physical abuse Sara had suffered’.

Sara had multiple unexplained fractures in 25 locations on her body which were most likely caused by ‘multiple episodes of blunt force trauma inflicted over several weeks’.

They included her right collar bone, both shoulder blades, both arms and hands, two of her ribs and 10 to the vertebrae.

‘Her bones were broken again and again, some perhaps from a twisting-type force but most by significant blunt force trauma – some of them with so much force that you might expect in cases of a child falling from a 20ft roof,’ the prosecutor said.

‘You might expect to see one single spinal process fracture. Sara’s spine had been broken in 10 places.’

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Jurors heard Sara began to wear a hijab to school to ‘conceal injuries to her face and head’ (Picture: PA)
A note written by Urfan Sharif found on the bed (Picture: Surrey Police)

A pathologist found head injuries caused by impacts to the head which would have left Sara severely unwell and close to death over several days before she succumbed.

There were several extremely rare fractures to the hyoid bone in Sara’s throat suggesting she had been repeatedly strangled for a period of six weeks before her death.

Abrasions to her left arm and inner thigh were deemed to be ‘probable human bite marks’, the jury heard.

Sara also had ‘horrible and extremely painful’ wounds to her buttocks and ankles consistent with burning and scalding injuries.

Jurors heard those injuries failed to heal properly and Mr Emlyn Jones painted a horrific image in explaining why – they likely became infected when Sara was restrained with her feet tucked beneath her bottom while wearing a soiled nappy.

The court heard Sara’s abuse followed a similar pattern – Batool would get angry at Sara for ‘misbehaving’ or doing something ‘naughty’ and then call Sharif home to ‘sort her out’.

‘Beinash Batool of course knows only too well exactly what that will involve because it’s been happening for years,’ Mr Emlyn Jones told jurors.

‘What it means is that Urfan Sharif will come home and beat Sara up. And yet Beinash Batool makes the call. She still makes the call.’

Sara Sharif’s father Urfan cried as he confessed to killing his daughter in a phone call to police from Pakistan, a court has heard (Picture: Surry Police)

Jurors saw messages from Batool to her sister dating back as far as 2021 – more than two years before her death – saying Sharif regularly ‘beat the crap out of Sara’ and describing her as being ‘covered in bruises, literally beaten black’.

In another sent in February 2022, she complained to another sister that her husband was ‘beating Sara up’ before adding if ‘something happens to Sara I will not be able to forgive myself’.

But she never reported what was going on or sought help for Sara.

By January 2023, Sara began wearing a hijab to school to cover up her bruises.

Teachers noticed marks on her face and referred her to social services in March of that year, but the case was dropped within days.

The following month, Sara was taken out of school and the violence against her intensified in the weeks before her death.

Urfan Sharif admitted beating his daughter to death while giving evidence halfway through the trial – but stopped short of pleading guilty to murder.

He told jurors Batool called him home saying Sara was seriously unwell. But he said he ‘whacked’ her in the abdomen with a metal pole as she lay in his wife’s arms because he thought she was being dramatic and pretending to be ill.

Sharif spent six days in the witness box denying any involvement in his daughter’s killing before dramatically telling jurors he accepted ‘full responsibility’ for Sara’s death.

But he still bizarrely tried to deny intending to cause ‘really serious harm’ – making him guilty of murder – when he assaulted her.

Batool’s barrister Caroline Carberry KC spoke for everyone watching in Court Number 5 when she asked him: ‘What did you intend to do when you took a cricket bat to the body of a 10-year-old girl?’

Beinash Batool, the stepmother of Sara Sharif (Picture: Surrey Police)

Mr Emlyn Jones insisted Sara’s grim fate could not be attributed to Sharif alone.

He pointed to the restraints, saying Batool was the one who ordered the rolls of packing tape used to bind and hood Sara before she was beaten with the cricket bat and metal pole.

It would also take more than one person to ensure she remained restrained because it continued even when Sharif left the house, he added.

The same went for the burns Sara suffered, the prosecutor added. The patterns of those injuries suggested the schoolgirl had not moved away from the searing pain, meaning she must have been held down by one person while another inflicted them.

And while Sharif and Malik, who moved in to stay with his brother’s family in December 2022, gave their dental impressions to prove they had not been the ones who bit Sara, Batool had not.

‘The campaign of violence was well established before Faisal Malik arrived, and by the time he moved in that violence to Sara was entrenched and it carried on,’ Mr Emlyn Jones said.

After the verdicts, Chief Superintendent Mark Chapman said: ‘Surrey Police’s thoughts continue to be with Sara’s mother and her siblings and anyone who knew Sara in her short life.

‘Through the course of this prosecution members of the public will have heard or read horrific detail around the injuries Sara sustained or the neglect that was administered to her. We would like to reach out to those people and say our thought are with them also.’

He said the circumstances of the case were ‘unusual’ as he paid tribute to the call handler who spoke to Sharif when he called to report his daughter’s death from Pakistan.

Court artist’s sketch of (from left to right) Faisal Malik, guard, stepmother Beinash Batool, guard, and father Urfan Sharif at the at the Old Bailey (Picture: Julia Quenzler/SWNS)

Ch Supt Chapman said: ‘Surrey Police worked tirelessly on this case in the early days with our partner agencies in this country and overseas.

‘It is a hugely complex legal and procedural framework that we needed to navigate in terms of seeking individuals that were wanted for serious matters in this country but were overseas in Pakistan.

‘That work was ongoing for many days and weeks following the discovery of Sara’s body. I would like to thank those agencies for their continued support in this investigation.’

Sara tortured and murdered in 'absolutely shocking case of brutal and prolonged abuse'

Maria Neophytou, acting Chief Executive of the NSPCC, said: ‘Sara Sharif was repeatedly assaulted and tortured before being finally murdered by her father and step-mother in what was an absolutely shocking case of brutal and prolonged abuse.

‘Her uncle was aware of the horrors she was being subjected to but did nothing to save her. Our thoughts go out to all those who loved and cared for Sara in a life that was marked by so much pain and suffering.

‘What this little girl endured over several years raises crucial questions about what more could have been done to protect her and important issues regarding child safeguarding.

‘It is vital that the Child Safeguarding Practice Review identifies any ways in which Sara could have been better protected, in an effort to prevent such tragedies from happening in the future.

‘This terrible case has also highlighted the ambiguity of the current legal position in England around the physical punishment of children.

‘It is disturbing that Urfan Sharif believed – and told police – that he “did legally punish” Sara for being naughty.

‘Politicians at Westminster must move swiftly to abolish the defence of “reasonable chastisement” and give children the same protection from assault as adults.

‘Families, professionals, and individuals can also all work to protect children by reporting any concerns, no matter how small, to the local authorities, the police, or the NSPCC Helpline.

‘If a child is in immediate danger, always call emergency services on 999.’

Libby Clark, from the Crown Prosecution Service, said: ‘Sara was a happy, outgoing and lively child described as always laughing, who was cruelly abused and murdered by those closest to her.

‘None of us can imagine how appalling and brutal Sara’s treatment was in the last few weeks of her short life. The injuries inflicted on her were absolutely horrendous.

‘We were able to build a strong case, showing where each defendant was in the weeks running up to Sara’s death using mobile phone evidence, CCTV sightings and work records.

‘In a small house with such a big family, it would have been immediately obvious to all the adults what was happening to Sara. Yet none of them took any action to stop it or report it. They all played their part in the violence that led to her tragic death.

‘We have today secured justice for Sara, a bubbly young girl, who was killed by the adults who should have protected her.’

Timeline shows how Sara was failed by authorities for years before her death

Heartbreaking footage shows a smiling Sara playing the guitar while singing about her ‘dreams’, which included being on The X Factor one day.

That spark faded with each beating at the hands of her family until it was finally extinguished in August last year.

Other home video footage said to have been taken 48 hours before she died shows Sara – by now made to wear a hijab to hide her injuries – smiling and dancing.

Mr Emlyn Jones told jurors: ‘It is heartbreaking to watch. Beaten black and blue under those clothes with open burns across her buttocks and ankles.

‘She was still doing her best to have fun, still doing her best to be a child.

‘Moving, you may think, a little awkwardly and looking a little drawn and hollow-cheeked, but alive at that time, if just a little bit longer.’

The trial revealed how Sara was let down by those who should have protected her.

– 2009 – Sharif meets his Polish girlfriend Olga online and they get married eight or nine months later. He also becomes a part-time taxi driver.

– 2011 – Sharif begins driving a taxi full-time.

– 2013 – The couple’s daughter, Sara, is born.

– 2014 – Olga and Sharif have an acrimonious break-up.

Sharif alleges that his former wife had ‘bitten’ another child and ‘abused’ Sara during and after their marriage.

– 2014 – Sara goes into foster care. Sharif meets Batool in the autumn of that year.

– January 2015 – Sara is returned to Sharif’s care, subject to Olga leaving the house.

– May 2015 – Batool moves in to live with Sharif, in Woking.

Olga makes allegations against Sharif about domestic abuse and child abuse.

Sara is placed back into Olga’s care.

– 2015 to 2017 – Sharif is permitted supervised contact with Sara.

– 2016 – Sharif says Batool hit him with a wooden lemon squeezer after he wanted to leave.

– 2017 – Sharif and Olga’s divorce is finalised.

– Sharif and Batool get married.

– 2019 – Sara makes allegations of abuse against Olga.

– 2019 – The family court awards Sharif custody of Sara.

– May 2021 – Batool sends a WhatsApp message to her sister saying Sharif ‘beat the crap out of Sara’ and she wants to report him, but does not.

– Summer 2022 – Batool confides to her sister that Sharif ‘beat Sara up’ and cannot send her back to school ‘looking like that’.

– June 6, 2022 – A member of staff at Sara’s school notices she has a bruise under her eye.

– June 13, 2022 – Sharif discusses a wish to home school Sara with staff, although she does go back.

– December 17, 2022 – Sharif’s brother Faisal Malik arrives in the UK from Pakistan and moves in with the family.

– January 2023 – Sara starts wearing a hijab to school, which the prosecution allege is to hide her bruises. Malik starts a course in international business and management at Portsmouth University.

– March 8, 2023 – Malik starts working at McDonald’s in Woking.

– March 10, 2023 – A member of staff at Sara’s school notices a bruise on her chin and dark bruise under her right eye. A referral is made to social services.

– March 16, 2013 – A decision is made by social services to take no further action on the referral.

– April 17, 2023 – Sara is taken out of school. The same month, the family move into a new house in Hammond Road, Woking.

– August 8, 2023 – Following a period of escalating violence, Batool calls Sharif home. He believes Sara is just pretending and whacks her with a metal pole in the stomach as she is dying. Within hours Sharif and Batool are booking flights to Pakistan.

– August 9, 2023 – Sharif, Batool and Malik travel to Islamabad from Heathrow Airport.

– August 10, 2023 – Sara is found dead in a bunk bed at home after Sharif called police from Pakistan to say he had beaten her ‘too much’. A confession note is found on a pillow next to the body.

– August 15 – A post-mortem examination identifies dozens of injuries including 25 fractures, a broken hyoid bone, human bite marks, iron burns to the bottom and scalding water burns to her feet with signs of restraint.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.




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