UK

Sara Sharif’s father and stepmother found guilty of murder after subjecting her to ‘brutal’ abuse

Sara Sharif’s father and stepmother have been found guilty of murdering the 10-year-old before fleeing to Pakistan.

Sara was hooded, tied up, beaten with a cricket bat, burnt with an iron and even bitten in a “brutal” campaign of abuse in the weeks before her death on 8 August last year, the Old Bailey heard.

Her body was found two days later in a bunk bed at her home in Woking, Surrey, after Urfan Sharif, 42, called police from Pakistan, where he had fled with the rest of his family.

Urfan Sharif, Beinash Batool and Faisal Malik.
Pic: Surrey Police
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Urfan Sharif, Beinash Batool and Faisal Malik. Pic: Surrey Police

The minicab driver sobbed during the call as he admitted “I’ve killed my daughter” and said “I beat her up too much” because “she was naughty”, adding: “I legally punished her, and she died.”

Police found a handwritten three-page note tucked under Sara’s pillow in which Sharif had written “Love You Sara” and “I killed my daughter by beating”.

Sara Sharif was found dead in her home. Pics: Surrey Police
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Sharif left a note under Sara’s pillow before fleeing the country. Pics: Surrey Police


“I am running away because I am scared but I promise that I will hand over myself and take punishment,” it said. “I swear to God that my intention was not to kill her but I lost it.”

Sharif, his wife Beinash Batool, 30, and his brother, McDonald’s worker Faisal Malik, 29, along with five children, were captured on CCTV at Heathrow Airport, where they boarded a flight to Islamabad the day after Sara’s death.

Re:Beenish Batool with her husband, Urfan Sharif and children
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Sharif and Batool

While in hiding, Sara’s father and stepmother gave a video statement to Sky News in which she described her stepdaughter Sara’s death as an “incident” and said they were “willing to cooperate with the UK authorities and fight our case in court”.

Read more: The missed opportunities to protect Sara Sharif

In footage shown in court Sara Sharif’s family was seen leaving for the airport the day before her body was found.
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Sara Sharif’s body was found in bed at her home. Pic: Surrey Police


Sharif, Batool and Malik were arrested as they returned to Gatwick Airport on 13 September, and all of them pleaded not guilty to her murder and an alternative count of causing or allowing the death of a child.

Sharif and Batool have now been found guilty of Sara’s murder.

Malik was found not guilty of murder, but guilty of causing or allowing the death of a child.

The judge, Mr Justice Cavanagh, said he will sentence them on Tuesday next week, telling jurors the case had been “extremely stressful and traumatic”.

Family fled to Pakistan. Pic: Surrey Police/PA
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The family fled to Pakistan. Pic: Surrey Police/PA

Pic: Surrey Police
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The couple were arrested on a flight to Gatwick. Pic: Surrey Police

History of domestic abuse

Sharif had been arrested over allegations made by three different Polish women, including Sara’s mother, Olga Sharif, between 2007 and 2010, including domestic violence and making threats to kill, but he was never charged.

Sara was born in 2013, but her parents split in an acrimonious break-up soon after, with accusations of abuse made against each other in a custody battle.

In 2019, the family court eventually awarded custody to Sharif, who had by then divorced Sara’s mother and married Batool.

Neighbours of their small flat described hearing “shockingly loud” sounds of smacking followed by “gut-wrenching screams”.

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What happened to Sara Sharif?

Last year, they moved to a three-bedroom house in Hammond Road, Woking, with Malik and a total of six young children where a new neighbour Judith Lozeron said the family were strangely quiet.

She told Sky News she got the feeling Sara was treated as “a bit of a servant” because she would see her doing chores, such as pegging out the washing and looking after other children.

“That isn’t really what a 10-year-old should be doing,” she said.

“I never saw her smile. I never saw her running, laughing or anything in the garden with the others.”

Prosecutors said Sara started wearing a hijab to hide her injuries, and the court heard she was taken out of school in April 2023 after teachers spotted bruises on her face and referred her to social services – but the case was closed after six days.

Sara Sharif.
Pic: Surrey Police
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Sara, aged four. Pic: Surrey Police

‘Such a special little soul’

A school friend said she saw locks on the bedroom doors when she went round to Sara’s to play.

“She was very happy and outgoing, and she always used to tell me, when she grows up, she likes to go to Los Angeles and be a model,” she told Sky News.

She said Sara told her she had fallen off her bike when she turned up at school with cuts and bruises on her face, adding: “She could have had them on her legs or arms but I couldn’t see them because she had long-sleeved tops on under her T-shirts and leggings under her skirts.”

Sara Sharif during reception year.
Pic: Surrey Police
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Sara ‘loved singing and dancing’. Pic: Surrey Police

Sara’s headteacher Jacquie Chambers said she was a “very caring, very confident little girl” who had the “cutest, biggest smile” and “absolutely loved singing and dancing”.

She said Sara would often talk of her dream of winning The X Factor and the school has now introduced a singing award in her memory.

“She was such a cheerful soul and I think that’s what’s really heartbreaking. She was such a special little soul,” she said.

“I don’t think I have ever felt so much sadness and I say that on behalf of all of the staff and the community. I think the shock was just immense.”

More than 70 injuries

Sara was found to have suffered more than 70 injuries, including “probable human bite marks”, 25 fractures, and bleeding on her brain, and her cause of death was given as “complications arising from multiple injuries and neglect”.

Prosecutors said all of the adults in the house were responsible for Sara’s death because one or two of them couldn’t have carried out the campaign of abuse without the complicity or assistance of others and none of them did anything to help.

Sharif initially claimed all the abuse happened while he was at work, blaming it on his “evil and psycho” wife.

But her barrister Caroline Carberry KC suggested she was “vulnerable” and a victim of “honour-based abuse”, forcing a surprise confession from Sharif in the witness box as he admitted killing his daughter by beating.

Undated handout photo issued by Surrey Police of the family home on Hammond Road in Woking, Surrey, where the body of 10-year-old Sara Sharif was found. Sara had been strangled until a bone in her neck broke up to three months before she died, a court has heard. Jurors previously heard the 10-year-old had suffered more than 70 injuries, shortly before she was found dead in her home in Woking, Surrey, on August 10 last year. Issue date: Thursday October 17, 2024.
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The family home in Woking, Surrey. Pic: Surrey Police

Sara Sharif.
Pic: Surrey Police
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Sara wore hijab ‘to hide injuries’. Pic: Surrey Police

‘I take full responsibility’

Sharif told the jury he beat Sara with a cricket bat as she was bound with packing tape, throttled her with his bare hands, hit her over the head with a mobile phone, and even whacked her with a metal pole as she lay dying.

“I can take full responsibility. I accept every single thing,” he said before asking for the murder charge to be put to him again.

But after a break, Sharif insisted he was not guilty of the charge, saying: “I didn’t want to hurt her.”

He also denied inflicting the bites and burns, while Batool and Malik both chose not to give evidence.

Surrey Police Detective Chief Superintendent Mark Chapman said an inquest and a safeguarding review would now examine whether Sara was failed by the police, social services, the courts or the education system in the years and months leading up to her death.

Describing the case as the most “shocking” in his almost 30-year career, he said he hadn’t seen another “where the treatment of a child leading to the horrific injuries that Sara suffered, the levels of neglect that were perpetrated upon her… reached these heights”.

“It’s those details which have driven my team on day in, day out to ensure that they secure justice for Sara,” he added.

Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) specialist prosecutor Libby Clark 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.”

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