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Sara Sharif’s head was covered with “homemade hoods” made of plastic bags and parcel tape in the weeks before her death, a court has heard on the second day of her murder trial.
The Old Bailey also heard on Tuesday that fingerprints allegedly belonging to the 10-year-old’s father, Urfan Sharif, were found on one of the bags and a bit of parcel tape.
Earlier, jurors were told neighbour Chloe Redwin, who used to live above the family at a previous address in 2020, would hear “shockingly loud” sounds of “smacking” from their home followed by “gut-wrenching screams”, and thought Urfan Sharif was “conscious of the noise his family made, because on occasions he would apologise for it”.
Surrey Police discovered Sara dead in a bedroom at her home in Woking on 10 August last year.
The court heard on Monday that the child was found with “disturbing” injuries that included bitemarks, scalding and broken bones in what was described as a “campaign of abuse”.
Urfan Sharif, 42, is standing trial before Mr Justice Cavanagh alongside Sara’s stepmother Beinash Batool, 30, and her uncle Faisal Malik, 29.
The defendants, formerly of Hammond Road in Woking, have pleaded not guilty to Sara’s murder and to causing or allowing the death of a child between 16 December 2022 and 9 August 2023.
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Stepmother told sister Urfan Sharif beat Sara ‘black’ in messages dating back to 2019
Sara Sharif’s stepmother told her sister if “something happens to Sara I will not be able to forgive myself” in messages documenting two-years of abuse, the court heard.
Beinash Batool had blamed her husband Urfan Sharif for beating the 10-year-old “black” in a series of WhatsApp messages dating back to 2019, the Old Bailey was told.
In May 2021, she messaged her sister: “Urfan beat the crap out of Sara. She’s covered in bruises, literally beaten black.
“I feel really sorry for Sara, poor girl can’t walk. I really want to report him.”
However the prosecution allege Ms Batool, 30, minicab driver Mr Sharif, 42, and his brother Faisal Malik, 29, all played a part in Sara’s death.
Prosecutor William Emlyn Jones KC told jurors: “As a minimum, it shows that Sara was being hurt and injured as long ago as spring of 2021 - so that is more than two years before her death - and that Beinash Batool was aware and even on her version of events, she didn’t stop it.”
In February 2022, the court heard she told another sister that Mr Sharif was “beating Sara up ... ‘cos she’s being naughty”, adding: “Something happens to Sara I will not be able to forgive myself.”
That summer Ms Batool complained that she could not cover up the bruises, saying: “He beat Sara up yesterday and I can’t send her to school on Monday looking like that.”
Sara was taken out of school in April 2023 and died four months later.
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 16:17
Police officer recalls finding Sara’s body under neatly placed white sheet
Police constable George Van Der Waart told the court he was dispatched to the Sharif family home shortly before 3am on 10 August, following Mr Sharif’s 999 call.
Giving evidence, he said he entered through an unlocked rear door and found the downstairs clean with no signs of any disturbance.
He discovered Sara’s body on a bunk bed in an upstairs bedroom with a fan switched on, he added.
“There was a blanket on the bed and…underneath the white sheet I could see a human shaped figure,” he told the Old Bailey. “I pulled back the cover and underneath was the body of a 10-year-old girl.”
He described her as being “placed” on the bed, where she was lying on her back. Asked about the sheet, he added: “It was neat on top literally like it had been laid there.”
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 15:50
Urfan Sharif’s 999 call played to court
In a harrowing phone played to the court, jurors heard Urfan Sharif reporting his daughter’s death to Surrey Police, telling them: “I beat her up, I it wasn’t my intention to kill her, but...I beat her up too much.”
He can be heard crying down the phone, pleading with officers to visit the address and saying: “Can you send someone, my daughter is alone.”
Asked what had happened, he said: “I think she was naughty over the last, three four weeks and I was giving her punishment, but she… to sort her out.”
When asked if she was breathing, he said: “I tried to, to give her CPR, everything but I fail [sic], I left in a panic... She is dead I am telling you.”
He adds that he will return to the property and told the operator it happened about 36 hours ago. He added: “I’m a cruel father.”
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 15:26
Recap: What trial heard this morning
- Schoolgirl Sara Sharif was made to wear a ‘home-made hood’ of plastic bags and parcel tape, the prosecution allege.
- The 10-year-old’s blood was found on a cricket bat and a vacuum cleaner at the family home, the court heard.
- Bruises found on Sara’s body matched a belt buckle and plastic-coated metal pole found in an outhouse at the property - where police also found a rolling pin with traces of her DNA, the jury heard.
- A neighbour heard a “high-pitched scream” two days before Sara was killed, court told.
- Another neighbour at a previous address claimed she heard “smacking” sounds followed by “gut-wrenching” screams at the family home.
- Sara Sharif began wearing a hijab to school in January 2023 “to conceal injuries to her face and head from the outside world,” the prosecution suggested.
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 15:11
Sara Sharif’s blood found on cricket bat at home, court told
Sara Sharif’s blood was found on a cricket bat and a vacuum cleaner at the family home, jurors at the Old Bailey were told.
Prosecutor William Emlyn Jones KC also alleged that bruises found on the 10-year-old’s body matched a belt buckle and plastic-coated metal pole found in an outhouse at the property, where police also found a rolling pin with traces of her DNA.
The schoolgirl was subjected to a “campaign of abuse” and suffered “brutal” injuries in the weeks before she died, it is alleged. All three defendants deny charges of murder and causing or allowing her death.
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 14:26
‘I cannot even imagine what happened to make crying or screaming child become immediately silent,’ trial hears from neighbour
A former neighbour of Sara Sharif and her family heard screaming and noises that sounded like “someone had been hit or smacked”, the trial at the Old Bailey heard on Tuesday.
Rebecca Spencer said she heard the noises “from the moment” the Sharif family moved into a flat on Eden Grove in West Byfleet in around 2018 to 2019, prosecutor William Emlyn Jones KC told jurors.
He said Ms Spencer thought the “banging and rattling” sounded like “someone was banging on and pushing at a door” as if trying to open it.
Reading a statement from Ms Spencer, Mr Emlyn Jones said: “On the occasions I would hear these banging and rattling sounds, they would often be accompanied by the sounds of a child crying or a screaming, followed by complete silence.
“On those occasions I can only describe the silence as ‘deathly quiet’ and I cannot even imagine what had happened to make the crying or screaming child become immediately silent.”
Ms Spencer said she thought two of the defendants, Sara’s father and stepmother, were living in the house at the time.
Tara Cobham15 October 2024 14:00
Sara Sharif’s primary school teacher describe her as ‘happy child’, jurors told
Sara Sharif’s primary school teacher described her as a “happy child”, jurors have been told.
Her year four and five teacher Helen Simmons said the 10-year-old was sometimes “sassy”, the Old Bailey heard during Sara’s murder trial on Tuesday.
Tara Cobham15 October 2024 13:30
Plastic coated metal pole found in outhouse a match to bruises on Sara’s body, jury told
Prosecutor William Emlyn Jones KCtold the court that some linear bruises found Sara Sharif’s body gave the impression of being caused by an object, rather than fists and feet.
A plastic coated metal pole found in a brick out house at the address was compared to Sara’s bruising by an expert.
“His conclusion is that the pole does appear to be a candidate for having been used to cause those particular bruises,” Mr Emlyn Jones said.
The expert also found that other bruises may have been caused by a belt buckle found in a Wendy house in the garden, he added.
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 13:00
Sara Sharif’s head covered with ‘home-made hoods’ of plastic bags and parcel tape, court told
Sara Sharif’s head may have been covered with “home-made hoods” made of plastic bags and parcel tape, the court heard.
In the month before the child died, her stepmother Beinash Batool allegedly bought 18 rolls of parcel tape online within nine days, jurors were told.
Police later found “strange-looking objects” in the wheelie bins that were “plastic bags wrapped up with parcel tape”, some of which had traces of Sara’s blood on, prosecutor William Emlyn Jones KC said.
He continued: “The prosecution suggest that it is in fact obvious what these items were.
“They are homemade hoods. They had been placed over Sara’s head, we suggest, and then taped in place.”
The trial heard that fingerprints allegedly belonging to her father, Urfan Sharif, were found on one of the bags that was tested by forensics and on the non-adhesive side of a bit of parcel tape.
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 12:52
Neighbour heard ‘single high pitched scream’ two days before Sara died, court told
Neighbour heard a “single high-pitched scream” of “someone in pain” two days before Sara Sharifdied, jurors were told.
Prosecutor William Emlyn Jones KC said neighbours who spoke to police after the 10-year-old’s death said “they had never seen or heard anything which caused them any concern”.
However, a woman had recalled that “she heard a noise that she considered very much out of the ordinary run of the noise from a family house” on 6 August 2023, the prosecutor said.
He continued: “It was a single high-pitched scream, which lasted a couple of seconds and stopped suddenly.
“It sounded to her like the scream of someone in pain, as she put it ‘it didn’t sound good’.”
The prosecution allege Sara died two days later on 8 August last year and the defendants flew to Pakistan the following day.
Amy-Clare Martin15 October 2024 12:16
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