His uncle Faisal Malik, 29, who had lived with the couple in Woking (south-west London) for eight months, was found guilty of “causing or making possible his death”. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison.
Unusually, the verdict was broadcast live on television.
The judge condemned the “almost inconceivable degree of cruelty” of the defendants, who “failed to show true remorse”.
Sara was treated “like she was worthless.” More than the other children in the house, she suffered this violence “because she was a girl”, born to another mother. She must have been “in a permanent state of terror.”
The autopsy of the little girl who died on August 8, 2023 revealed around a hundred internal and external injuries including head trauma, multiple fractures, bruises and scars, burn marks, including one with an iron, and human bite marks.
Flight to Pakistan
The morning after Sara's death, her father, stepmother and uncle flew to Pakistan with the five other children, leaving the little girl's body on a bed.
During the trial, Urfan Sharif, a taxi driver, first accused his wife, then admitted responsibility, while claiming that he did not want to kill Sara.
It was he who informed the English police, explaining by telephone, once he arrived in Pakistan, that he had wanted to “legally punish” his daughter but had “beat her too much”.
After a month on the run, the trio returned to the UK and were arrested on the plane. The five children are still in Pakistan.
Sara's teacher told the trial of a little girl who arrived in class wearing a hijab in January 2023, the only one in her family to wear one, and who pulled on it to hide marks. Noticing traces of blows, the school issued three reports, without result.
By April 2023, the family had moved and Urfan Sharif announced to the school that Sara would now be homeschooled.
“Executioners”
At the trial, he admitted to having strangled his daughter several times with his bare hands – to the point of breaking a bone in her neck -, to having hit her with a cricket bat while she was tied up, or even a high chair leg. .
Social services knew Urfan Sharif and Olga, Sara's Polish mother whom he had met online, even before the little girl was born.
Sara and her older brother had been placed in a foster home several times, then returned to their mother once separated from Sharif, before a judge decided to entrust Sara and her brother to their father in 2019, despite his violent nature.
Sara, buried in Poland, is “now an angel watching us from heaven,” her mother wrote in a letter read by the prosecutor before the verdict.
The death of Sara Sharif and then the trial traumatized the British and made headlines.
“The state has failed too many children in recent years, it is clear that we must act,” Education Minister Bridget Phillipson said on Tuesday morning on the BBC.
The government is due to present a bill on Tuesday to better protect vulnerable children. The text notably imposes restrictions on home schooling for children whose family environment is considered unsuitable or dangerous.
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