Father, stepmother of British-Pakistani girl convicted of her murder

An undated handout photograph made available by Surrey Police on December 11, 2024 shows British-Pakistani girl Sara Sharif at school. The father and stepmother of Sara Sharif were found guilty on December 11, 2024 of her murder in a gruesome case of child abuse that has shocked the UK. (AFP)
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Updated 11 December 2024
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Father, stepmother of British-Pakistani girl convicted of her murder

  • Police found 10-year-old Sara Sharif’s body last year with dozens of injuries including bruising, burns and fractures
  • Discovery was made after Sharif’s father told UK police from Pakistan he “legally punished her and she died”

LONDON: The father and stepmother of a 10-year-old girl found dead in her home in England were found guilty Wednesday of her murder.
Urfan Sharif, 42, was accused of Sara Sharif’s murder alongside his partner, 30-year-old Beinash Batool. His brother, 29-year-old Faisal Malik, was found guilty of causing or allowing the girl’s death.
Police found Sara’s body under a blanket in a bunk bed at her home in Woking, southwest of London, on Aug. 10, 2023, with dozens of injuries including extensive bruising, burns and fractures. A post-mortem examination concluded she died of unnatural causes.
Prosecutors have said that all three defendants played a part in a “campaign of abuse” against Sara in the weeks leading to her death. The three fled the UK for Islamabad, the Pakistani capital, on Aug. 9, the day after Sara was believed to have died.
The discovery was made after Urfan Sharif called UK police from Pakistan to say he had “legally punished her, and she died,” prosecutors said. He told the phone operator it wasn’t his intention to kill her but he had “beat her up too much,” they said.




A combination of handout photographs made available by Surrey Police on December 11, 2024 shows (L-R) Urfan Sharif, Beinash Batool and Faisal Malik, respectively father, stepmother and uncle of British-Pakistani girl Sara Sharif in custody. (AFP)

Police in Pakistan found the three suspects after an extensive search and put them on a flight to the UK They were arrested upon arrival at London’s Gatwick Airport.
Batool and Malik had declined to give evidence. They denied involvement in the abuse.
Prosecutor William Emlyn Jones has said all three defendants lived in the same house as Sara and that it was “inconceivable” that just one of them had acted alone.
He alleged that each of the suspects sought to point the finger at the others. He said Sharif’s case was that Batool, Sara’s stepmother, was responsible for the girl’s death, and he made a false confession to protect her.
The jury heard a recording of a phone call made on the evening of Aug. 8, 2023, the day Sara was believed to have died, in which Batool could be heard asking about booking a flight to Islamabad for four adults and four children.


Pakistan grants commercial license to Kuwait-backed Shariah-compliant digital bank

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Pakistan grants commercial license to Kuwait-backed Shariah-compliant digital bank

  • Pakistan has announced that Raqqami Islamic Digital Bank aims to launch operations this month with $100 million investment
  • Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif calls for Kuwait and Pakistan to translate cordial political relations into strong economic ties

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif granted the Kuwait Investment Authority-backed Raqqami Islamic Digital Bank (RIDB) the commercial license to operate in Pakistan on Tuesday, stressing the need to convert cordial political ties between the two countries into a strong economic relationship. 

Pakistan’s finance adviser Khurram Schehzad announced last month that RIDB intends to launch operations in the South Asian country from February with a $100 million investment. 

The RIDB describes itself as Pakistan’s first fully Shariah-compliant digital bank. The retail bank offers online financing, savings and payment services to individuals and small and medium-sized enterprises, also focusing on financial inclusion for underserved segments.

Prime Minister Sharif participated in a ceremony to grant the license to RIDB in Islamabad. The event was attended by top RIDB officials including its Chairman Abdullah Al-Mutairi and Chief Executive Officer Umair Aijaz. 

“This would go a long way in further strengthening our brotherly and our bilateral economic relations,” Sharif told participants. “You said very aptly that economic and brotherly relations go hand in hand. It cannot be that your political relations flourish but economic relations remain stagnant.”

He said the Shariah-compliant digital bank will also have features that will support and augment banking in Pakistan. 

Sharif called on both nations to join hands to promote their bilateral economic, investment and trade relations “like never before.” He vowed that Pakistan’s government was committed to enhancing bilateral trade and economic ties by working closely with the Kuwaiti government.

Pakistan’s banking sector is dominated by a handful of large lenders with strong capital buffers and profits driven largely by holdings of government securities.

Pakistan has intensified its efforts in recent years to secure foreign investment, particularly from Gulf nations, as it seeks to ensure sustained economic progress. Schehzad has said that the RIDB’s entry into Pakistan reflects strengthening investment ties between Islamabad and Kuwait, particularly in the financial and digital economy sectors.