Cousin of 'murdered' Sara Sharif's stepmum urges her to come home and talk to police
A cousin of Beinash Batool, Sara Sharif's stepmum, has urged her to hand herself in to the police in Pakistan, and told how she ran away to "secretly" marry Urfan Sharif.
Sara Sharif's fugitive stepmum should come back to the UK and tell the police exactly what happened, her relative has said.
The 10-year-old girl was found dead at her home in Woking, Surrey after police were called from Pakistan by her dad Urfan Sharif on August 10. Mr Sharif, 41, his partner, Beinash Batool, 29, and his brother, Faisal Malik, 28, are thought to have travelled to Islamabad on August 9 and are wanted for questioning.
They travelled with five children aged between one and 13 years old, police said. A cousin of Ms Batool has now urged her to hand herself in to the police, saying her family "don't know what happened".
The relative, who asked not to be named, told Sky News: "Beinash should come back to the UK. I don't know where she is. But I'm worried about her. I'm worried about her kids. She should come back to the UK, go to the police and tell them exactly what happened."
She added: "I don't know - my family don't know - what happened. It could have been an accident; a misunderstanding." Ms Batool's cousin, who is originally from Gujrat in Pakistan, also told the broadcaster Ms Batool was estranged from her parents, having run away to marry Mr Sharif.
The relative told Sky News: "The relationship (with her family) is finished. She married secretly, and her father said, 'She is not my daughter'. She hasn't spoken to her parents since." Sara's grandfather, Muhammad Sharif, 68, has also urged his son Urfan Sharif to hand himself over to the police.
Muhammad Sharif said his son had briefly visited the family home in the city of Jhelum, Punjab province, earlier this month before he disappeared again. He said Urfan did not tell him about Sara's death. He told The Sunday Times: "We want them to present themselves.
We want them to resolve the matter as the privacy of our house is affected due to frequent police raids." Surrey Police are continuing to appeal for information to help them piece together a picture of Sara's lifestyle prior to her death.
They widened the timescale of their investigation after the post-mortem examination revealed that Sara had suffered multiple and extensive injuries, likely to have been caused over a sustained and extended period of time. Sara's mother, Olga Sharif, is being supported by specialist officers.
Surrey County Council previously told how Sara was known to the local authority. Detective Superintendent Mark Chapman, from the Surrey Police and Sussex Police Major Crime Team, earlier said: "We know that there will be lots of people in the Woking community and beyond who will have had contact with Sara who may not already have come forward, and we would encourage them to do so.