Sara
Sharif ‘was doing her best to be a child’ – while suffering years of abuse
‘Heartbreaking’
video showed 10-year-old dancing with visible injuries two days before her
father murdered her
Father and
stepmother of 10-year-old Sara Sharif found guilty of her murder
What were
the missed chances to prevent Sara Sharif’s death?
Emine Sinmaz
Wed 11 Dec
2024 13.25 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/dec/11/sara-sharif-child-suffering-years-abuse
At first
glance, a home video that showed Sara Sharif singing in front of the TV could
have been filmed in any happy household. But on closer inspection it was clear
that a small chunk of the little girl’s finger was missing and there was a deep
scratch to her nose.
Unseen by
the lens were the scores of devastating injuries inflicted on Sara during a
years-long campaign of abuse by her father, Urfan Sharif, and stepmother,
Beinash Batool.
“It is
heartbreaking to watch,” the prosecutor, William Emlyn Jones KC, told jurors at
the Old Bailey after they had been shown the footage.
“Beaten
black and blue under those clothes, with open burn wounds on her buttocks and
ankles, she was still doing her best to have fun, still doing her best to be a
child. Moving a little awkwardly, looking rather drawn and hollow-cheeked, but
alive at that time, just for a little longer.”
Sara died
two days later. The full extent of her injuries was not discovered until she
was found neatly tucked into a bunk bed at her family home in Woking, Surrey,
on 10 August 2023.
A postmortem
found she had 71 external injuries, including bruises, burns, and human bite
marks. She also had at least 25 fractures, including to the hyoid bone in her
neck and 11 to her spine from being beaten with a cricket bat, metal pole and
mobile phone.
Sharif, 43,
and Batool, 30, were found guilty of murder on Wednesday after a seven-week
trial that laid bare the brutal violence he meted out on his daughter. Sharif’s
brother Faisal Malik, 29, was convicted of causing or allowing the death of a
child.
Sara was
born on 11 January 2013 and immediately made subject to a child protection plan
due to existing concerns about her parents. She was briefly placed into foster
care in 2014 and later a refuge after her biological mother, Olga Domin,
accused Sharif of domestic abuse. Sara returned to live with her father after a
family court ruling in October 2019.
A happy,
bubbly and “sometimes sassy” child, she was not afraid to answer back,
according to her teachers at St Mary’s primary in West Byfleet. “She could be
very spirited and quite bold and fierce with what she wanted to say. She loved
to be on stage and singing and performing, that was her kind of happy place,”
said Helen Simmons, who taught Sara between the ages of eight and 10.
But Sara’s
spark had faded by the time the family moved to a new three-bedroom house in
Woking in April 2023, the same month that Sharif and Batool removed her from
school to hide her increasing injuries from the outside world.
“Never was
she smiling when I saw her, not one time,” said Judith Lozeron, the family’s
new nextdoor neighbour. “I was told she was bullied at school for wearing a
hijab and she was being home schooled because of that. Every single time I saw
her she wore a hijab – she was the only member of the family who wore that.”
Sara had
been routinely “brutally mistreated, abused, and violently assaulted” for years
but it was in this period that Sharif ramped up his abuse.
His daughter
was tied up and beaten with a cricket bat and an improvised metal truncheon
made from the leg of a high chair. She was also hooded with a plastic bag that
was taped across her head.
Her ankles
were bound while hot water was poured on them, leaving symmetrical open sores.
Her bottom was burned with an iron, which too left open sores. She was made to
wear a nappy so her abuser could keep her restrained during the serial
assaults.
Even in
death Sara was afforded no dignity. Her battered body was stripped and, it was
suggested, possibly jetwashed in the garden as the family prepared to flee to
Pakistan. Her soaking-wet leggings and nappy were found entwined in the garden
bin, alongside packing tape and the homemade blood-stained hoods.
After
attempting to clean up the crime scene, the defendants fled to Pakistan on 9
August from where Sharif called police to say he had beaten Sara up “too much”
for being naughty. He had also left a handwritten “confession” near her fully
clothed body saying: “I swear to God that my intention was not to kill her. But
I lost it.”
The family
got rid of their mobile phones while on the run for more than a month in
Pakistan. They returned to the UK on 13 September 2023 and gave no comment
during interviews with Surrey police.
But it was
difficult to keep up with Sharif’s lies when he gave his account in the witness
box in courtroom 5. For six days, he presented himself as a selfless father and
husband who worked day and night as a taxi driver to provide for his family.
He claimed
he was the victim of baseless accusations. The fact that three former Polish
girlfriends had told police the same thing – that he had kept them prisoner and
threatened and controlled them – was “a coincidence”, he said.
Sharif
called the women liars, and claimed they had in fact threatened and assaulted
him. “I’ve never been violent towards anyone,” he told the nine women and three
men charged with deciding his fate. “I’ve never been frightening or aggressive
towards anyone at all.”
Social
services records about his alleged abuse of women and children and his coercive
nature were also incorrect or merely opinions, he claimed.
There was
also a fair bit of mud-slinging. Sharif repeatedly pointed at Batool in the
dock and called her a psycho. He said she was a liar and suggested she had
bitten Sara “like an animal” and tied her up. Neither Batool nor Malik gave
evidence during the trial.
But Sharif’s
own lies unravelled on day seven of his evidence. It began with a fairly
innocuous question from Caroline Carberry KC, Batool’s barrister, as he was to
be cross-examined for the third day.
In a moment
of courtroom drama normally only seen on TV, Sharif quietly replied that he had
something to say. “I want to admit that it’s all my fault. I want the court to
consider my full note and confession,” he said.
The jury
were open-mouthed. Batool began wailing in the dock. The admission even took
Sharif’s barrister, Naeem Mian KC, by surprise. “I had absolutely no idea that
he was going to do that,” he later told jurors.
Sharif went
on to accept that he had repeatedly beaten Sara with a cricket bat and metal
pole as a punishment for being naughty, vomiting and soiling herself. He said
he had intended to cause her serious harm. He had, in effect, admitted murder.
But after a
brief recess for legal advice, Sharif back-pedalled. He said he had struck Sara
with a cricket bat but just the once, and he had been trying to discipline her,
not hurt her.
Sharif took
issue with details in the claims against him. While he admitted beating Sara
with a cricket bat after binding her ankles and wrists with packing tape, he
was upset by the suggestion he had forced her to do squats. At times he
struggled to compose himself, either openly crying or, as Emlyn Jones put it,
“sniffing and snorting and looking all cross”.
Sharif also
repeatedly denied hooding, biting or burning Sara. When asked how she had
suffered a severe burn on her bottom, Sharif suggested another child might have
inflicted it. A visibly exasperated Emlyn Jones replied: “How low will you go?”
The
prosecutor said Sharif had tried to get away with murder, but it took just two
days of deliberation for the jury to see through his lies and find him guilty.
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