https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/17/sara-sharif-sentencing-urfan-sharif-murder/
Sara Sharif’s father and stepmother sentenced to life for 10-year-old’s murder
Urfan Sharif and Beinash Batool The father and stepmother of Sara Sharif have been handed life sentences for their killing of the 10-year-old.Urfan Sharif, 43, was jailed for a minimum term of 40 years and Beinash Batool, 30, will serve at least 33 years for their murder of the schoolgirl who they subject to “what can only be described as torture”.Sara’s uncle, 29-year-old Faisal Malik, who lived in the family home, was cleared of her murder but found guilty of causing or allowing her death and was jailed for 16 years.The three did not react at the Old Bailey as they were jailed for their of Sara.Sentencing them, Mr Justice John Cavanagh said that although the Old Bailey had heard many crimes, “few can have been more terrible” than their treatment of the youngster.The trio were convicted last week following an eight-week trial in which jurors heard Sara suffered more than 25 broken bones, scalding marks to her feet, and human bites during a campaign of abuse.Sara’s body was found at the family’s home in Surrey last year after being victim to treatment the judge described as “nothing short of gruesome”.Mr Justice Cavanagh, giving his reasons for the sentences, said that Sara’s death was the “culmination of years of neglect, frequent assaults and what can only be described as the torture of [Sara]”.He said her death illustrated the “dangers” of unsupervised home schooling as the couple managed to withdraw her from school when safeguarding issues were raised.None of the defendants had shown a “shred of remorse”, he added.At the court hearing, Sara’s mother, Olga Domin, described her daughter’s killers as “sadists” and “executioners”.In a statement read to the court, she said: “To this day I can’t understand how someone can be such a sadist to a child.“What has come out in court… I cannot understand what is wrong with these people.”In court, Sara’s family fought over who was most to blame, as Naeem Mian KC, for Sharif, claimed Batool was “equally culpable” for her death and encouraging the judge to “not draw any distinction between them”.In response, Batool’s barrister, Caroline Carberry KC, said her client was “subordinate” to her husband, who had been the “instigator of violence” against her stepdaughter.However, sentencing them, Mr Justice Cavanagh said the couple had “singled out” Sara because she was not Batool’s biological daughter with “truly horrific” treatment of which there were “a number of particular disturbing features”.He said Sharif was mainly responsible for the “campaign of abuse” – and that the degree of cruelty was “unbelievable” and “happened in plain sight”.The judge said Sara’s uncle, Malik, had “stood by and did nothing” when he must have been aware of the beatings, burnings and tying up and hooding she suffered.He described Sara as a “brave, feisty and spirited child” who was “not submissive as her father wanted her to be.“She stood up to you,” he said.“She was a very courageous little girl, with an unquenchable spirit.”Sara Sharif’s father guilty of her murder as it emerges he exploited EU rules to stay in UK Sara Sharif’s father guilty of her murder as it emerges he exploited EU rules to stay in UK
The 42-year-old arranged a ‘sham marriage’ that would permit him to remain in Britain when his visa expired
Will BoltonCrime correspondent
11 December 2024 1:51pm GMT
The father of Sara Sharif, who has been found guilty of the 10-year-old’s murder, exploited EU rules to stay in the UK, The Telegraph can reveal.
Urfan Sharif, 42, and stepmother Beinash Batool, 30 were convicted of killing the schoolgirl after an eight-week trial at the Old Bailey.
During the trial, it was revealed that Sharif, a “serial abuser of vulnerable women”, arranged a “sham marriage” to a Polish woman to remain in Britain.
The 42 year-old’s history of violence against vulnerable women and children was also laid bare. It emerged that at least three separate women had accused him of assault.
He was also accused of being a gambling addict with a taste for whisky.
Teachers noticed marks on Sara and reported it to social services Credit: SURREY POLICE
Jurors took just nine hours to unanimously find the pair guilty of the murder of 10-year-old Sara who was discovered with over 70 injuries, including 25 fractures, at her home in Woking, Surrey on Aug 10 last year.
Sara’s uncle Faisal Malik, 29, was found guilty of causing or allowing her death. He was found not guilty of her murder.
Mr Justice Cavanagh adjourned sentencing until next Tuesday, telling jurors the case had been “extremely stressful and traumatic”.
Batool, wearing a black blazer, cried as the verdicts were read out. Malik, in a grey prison issue sweatshirt, put his head in his hands.
Sharif, wearing a white zip up cardigan, did not react as the verdict was read out, but was seen holding his head in his hands as he left the courtroom.
Sharif moved to the UK in 2003 from Jhelum in Pakistan on a student visa to study business management in London.
By November 2009, Sharif was working part-time as a taxi driver and that same month he married Olga Domin, then 23, at a registry office in Surrey.
During his trial, Caroline Carberry KC, representing Batool accused Sharif of pursuing Polish women because the country was a member of the EU.
She accused him of entering into a sham marriage with Ms Domin, which he denied.
Beinash Batool was found guilty of Sara’s murder Credit: SURREY POLICE
By marrying her, he would be allowed to stay in the UK when his student visa expired as a result of conditions in the Free Movement Directive, introduced in 2004.
Sharif claimed in court he was later given indefinite leave to remain in the UK. The Home Office said it did not comment on individual cases.
A pattern of behaviour
A year after getting married, Sharif was arrested after Ms Domin’s mother contacted police from Poland because she was concerned for her daughter’s safety.
Ms Domin told police that her husband had been violent in the home on more than one occasion.
Sharif claimed she had attacked him during an argument. He was later bailed and Ms Domin withdrew the allegation.
A month later, Sharif was convicted of stealing £1,700 from McDonald’s where he had been working as a manager.
He was arrested in December 2007 for false imprisonment, theft and criminal damage. His accuser was an 18-year-old Polish girl whom he had allegedly been going out with since 2004, when she would have been around 15.
Sara dressed up for Christmas festivities at her school Credit: SURREY POLICE
She alleged he locked her in the house against her will, took her passport and smashed her phone.
He then allegedly threatened her with a knife and told her he would kill her. Sharif denied the claims and suggested it was she who had in fact assaulted him.
Two years later, in March 2009, Anna, another Polish woman, then 31, emailed Surrey Police after she “escaped” Sharif’s home and fled back to her country.
Again he was interviewed but no further action was taken.
Sharif and Batool fled to Pakistan after Sara died at the family home in Woking, Surrey, on Aug 8 2023.
He called police when he arrived in Islamabad and confessed he had beaten her up “too much”.
Officers went to his former home and found Sara’s body in a bunk bed, with a confession note from Sharif on the pillow.
She had 10 spinal fractures and further fractures to her right collar bone, both shoulder blades, both arms, both hands, three separate fingers, bones near the wrist in each hand, two ribs and her hyoid bone in the neck.
There was evidence she had been restrained with packing tape and beaten, while a “homemade hood” made of plastic bags was discovered in a bin outside the house.
Jurors were brought to tears on several occasions as they heard details of Sara’s suffering. Sharif’s own barrister told the court his client was a “scumbag” who “would be in the circles of hell for eternity”.
Sharif admitted responsibility for his daughter’s death after he beat her with a cricket bat and metal pole on Aug 6, two days before she died.
Notes from Sharif were found next to Sara’s body in August 2023 Credit: SURREY POLICE
Sharif admitted to hitting Sara with a cricket bat two days before she died Credit: SURREY POLICE
Batool had told her sisters that Sharif would regularly “beat the crap” out of Sara over the course of more than two years, but failed to report what was going on.
By January 2023, Sara began wearing a hijab to cover up the bruises at school. Teachers noticed marks on her face and referred her to social services in March of that year, but the case was dropped within days.
Sara was born in January 2013 and because allegations of violence had been made by other children in Ms Domin and Sharif’s care, she was immediately placed on a child protection plan.
Sharif had allegedly slapped the children and one had been seen with a burn mark on their leg and forehead.
Friends said that while Sharif professed to be a devout Muslim, he was known to drink heavily at night and had developed a gambling addiction and mounting debts.
One former neighbour said that he had a run in with Sharif while he was having renovations done. “He became quite aggressive”, he said.
Ms Domin’s father said Sharif was “a great manipulator” who initially seemed charming but was in fact a “toxic abuser”.
Speaking from his home in Nowa Sól, Poland, Merzy Domin told The Times that “the whole system had failed” to protect his granddaughter.
Telling Polish TV channel Uwaga of his sadistic abuse, Ms Domin said: “Once, he tried to set me on fire, poured oil on me, but his cousin stopped him. He simply locked me in a room. Locked me in all day until the police arrived.”
Sara Sharif pictured here when she was four years old Credit: SURREY POLICE/PA
Imam Hafiz Hashmi, the leader of the local Shah Jahan Mosque in Woking, said he knew of the Sharif family but they had not regularly attended prayers.
He said: “It is unacceptable and horrific and awful what has happened. I simply cannot imagine what went on in that house.”
From 2014 to 2017, after he split up with Ms Domin, Sharif was only allowed supervised contact with Sara.
In January 2015, one social worker who observed visits between Sharif and Sara at a Sure Start centre in Woking said that he was told Sharif had been waving a knife around at home.
The social worker “also noted during that meeting he appeared to be easily irritated when Sara played. When he went over to Sara, she would shout at him to go away”.
Despite these concerns, Sharif was awarded custody of Sara in 2019 by Guildford Family Court after he filmed Sara making allegations of domestic abuse against her mother.
Ms Domin was said to have learning difficulties and was deemed to be “vulnerable”.
Paying tribute to her daughter, Ms Domin, said: “My dear Sara, I ask God to please take care of my little girl, she was taken too soon.
“Sara had beautiful brown eyes and an angelic voice. Sara’s smile could brighten up the darkest room.
“Everyone who knew Sara will know her unique character, her beautiful smile and loud laugh.
“She will always be in our hearts, her laughter will bring warmth to our lives. We miss Sara very much. Love you Princess.”
Det Supt Mark Chapman, the lead investigator, said before the jury reached its verdict, that it would be “inappropriate” to comment on the actions of other safeguarding agencies.
He added: “That scrutiny will come as we go into the safeguarding review and inquest.
“At that point, it will be for safeguarding partners, whether they’re within the council, social services, education, to answer as to the role of their employees in the safeguarding care that was provided to Sara in the months leading up to her death.”
Following the verdicts on Wednesday, Dame Rachel de Souza, the children’s commissioner, said it highlighted “profound weaknesses in our child protection system”.
She said: “There can be no doubt that Sara was failed in the starkest terms by the safety net of services around her.
“Even before she was born, she was known to social care – and yet she fell off their radar so entirely that by the time she died, she was invisible to them all.
“We can have no more reviews, no more strategies, no more debate. When we say ‘never again’, we have to mean it – let that be Sara’s legacy.”
She called for a raft of changes including “proper oversight” for children, like Sara, being homeschooled.
Maria Neophytou, acting chief executive of the NSPCC, said it was an “absolutely shocking case” raising “crucial questions” about child protection.
Surrey Police has been contacted for comment
regarding the three instances of domestic abuse.
‘Cultural sensitivities’ may have stopped teachers intervening to save Sara Sharif, MP suggests
Urfan Sharif and Beinash Batool forced their daughter to wear a hijab after bruises become too noticeable
Will Forster says the abuse Sara Sharif suffered at the hands of the people who were meant to protect her was “heartbreaking and vile” Credit: X/@WillForster
Will BoltonCrime correspondent
12 December 2024 1:17am GMT
An inquest into the death of Sara Sharif should examine if concerns over cultural sensitivities meant teachers were afraid to question why she began wearing a hijab after being seen with bruises, an MP has suggested.
Will Forster, who became MP for Woking in July, said that the review into the 10-year-old’s death had to look at every aspect of her care.
At the Old Bailey on Wednesday, Urfan Sharif, Sara’s father, 42, and Beinash Batool, her step-mother, 30, were convicted of her murder.
Faisal Malik, 29, her uncle, was convicted of causing or allowing her death but was cleared of murder.
Sara was found dead at her home in Woking, Surrey, on August 10 last year after being “tortured” for years.
She was beaten with a cricket bat, burnt with an iron, and restrained and hooded with packing tape.
In the final eight months of her life, Sara was forced by Sharif and Batool to wear a hijab after bruises on her head and neck became too noticeable.
She had previously been seen with bruises on her face but despite that, The Telegraph understands the issue of the change in her appearance was never raised with social services.
Despite Sara being forced to wear the hijab by Sharif and Batool to cover the bruises, Surrey Police released an image of her in the headscarf at the conclusion of the trial.
Police released an image of Sara Sharif in a hijab Credit: Surrey Police/PA
Speaking to The Telegraph, Mr Forster said that what had come out during the trial was “appalling” but “there is still more to come out”.
He was asked by The Telegraph whether there were concerns over the fact that the school had never raised the fact that Sara had suddenly begun wearing a hijab after being seen with bruises.
Mr Forster replied: “Yes, everything needs to be looked at in the inquest and studied.”
He added: “Until we have the inquest and safeguarding review we won’t know the full facts. As soon as we do I think we can then learn lessons.”
Sara was taken out of school on two occasions prior to her death to be homeschooled.
A few weeks before she was removed for the first time, teachers noticed bruises on her face and made a referral to social services. The council conducted checks but closed the case within six days.
When she was taken out of school for the second time teachers at the school contacted the social services safeguarding team and were told that if they had concerns, they should make a referral. This did not happen.
Mr Forster said that the fact that Sara was taken out of school after being seen with bruises had to be examined to prevent other parents “abusing the system”.
He said that the abuse the schoolgirl suffered at the hands of the people who were meant to protect her was “heartbreaking and vile”.
He said: “Although it’s right that justice has been served, we now owe it to Sara’s memory to ensure that a horrendous case like this can’t happen again.
“Sara was tortured for ten years. It is heartbreaking to think of the warning signs that were missed that allowed her to die at the hands of those who were meant to protect her.
“We need an immediate inquest into her murder. This will be vital for understanding how the system let Sara down and what changes will be needed to prevent this tragedy from happening again.”
Meanwhile, the Children’s Commissioner has urged for the law to change so children who are suspected victims of abuse cannot be home educated.
Urfan Sharif, Sara Sharif’s father, was convicted of her murder while Faisal Malik, her uncle, was convicted of causing or allowing her death Credit: Elizabeth Cook/PA
Following the verdicts on Wednesday, Dame Rachel de Souza, the children’s commissioner for England, said it highlighted “profound weaknesses in our child protection system”.
She said: “There can be no doubt that Sara was failed in the starkest terms by the safety net of services around her.
“Even before she was born, she was known to social care – and yet she fell off their radar so entirely that by the time she died, she was invisible to them all.
“We can have no more reviews, no more strategies, no more debate. When we say ‘never again’, we have to mean it – let that be Sara’s legacy.”
Beinash Batool, Sara Sharif’s step-mother, was also convicted of the 10-year-old’s murder Credit: Surrey Police/PA
She called for a raft of changes including “proper oversight” for children, like Sara, being homeschooled, including a home education register, which is to be included in the Government’s proposed Children’s Wellbeing Bill.
She also said councils should be given powers to sign off on home education requests for vulnerable children.
Maria Neophytou, acting chief executive of the NSPCC, said it was an “absolutely shocking case” raising “crucial questions” about child protection.
Rachael Wardell, from Surrey County Council, said that until an independent safeguarding review has concluded, a “complete picture cannot be understood or commented upon”.
Court was told Sara Sharif’s father abused her siblings – but gave him joint custody anywayCourt was told Sara Sharif’s father abused her siblings – but gave him joint custody anyway
Murdered schoolgirl had been on child protection list since birth over allegations of neglect and violence
Sara’s mother, who has learning difficulties, had given her consent for the children to be looked after by father Urfan Sharif and Beinash Batool Credit: Surrey Police/PA
Will BoltonCrime Correspondent
11 December 2024 9:01pm GMT
The Family Court gave Sara Sharif’s killer father shared custody of his daughter despite knowing he had been accused of abusing her siblings for years, it can now be revealed.
Urfan Sharif, 42, Sara’s father, and Beinash Batool, 30, her stepmother, were convicted of the 10-year-old’s murder on Wednesday following an eight-week trial.
In October 2019, almost four years before Sara was killed, the couple had been awarded shared custody of her by the Family Court.
Sara’s mother, Olga Domin, who has learning difficulties, had given her consent for the children to be looked after by Batool and Sharif.
Allegations of abuse and neglect had been made against both Ms Domin and Sharif at the time.
Social services first became involved with the family after Sharif was arrested on suspicion of assault on Ms Domin and a baby in 2010.
Ms Domin told police her husband had been violent in the home on more than one occasion, but Sharif claimed she had attacked him during an argument.
It was a pattern that was to continue for the next nine years with Ms Domin, Sharif and their children all making allegations of abuse.
Sharif was bailed and Ms Domin withdrew the allegation, but despite that, Sara and her sibling, who can only be named as U, were placed on a child protection plan by social services at Surrey county council.
Urfan Sharif, Sara’s father, who was convicted of her murder Credit: Surrey Police
Sibling told teacher of violence
Two months later, a social services investigation was triggered after another sibling, known as Z for legal reasons, told teachers he was being physically assaulted by his parents.
By the end of the year, child U and child Z were again made the subject of child protection plans following allegations of neglect.
Police who visited the family home in 2011 and 2012 reported that they had concerns the children were not being supervised adequately, were being abused emotionally and that the house was dirty.
Sara was born in January 2013 and was immediately placed on a child protection plan.
A month later, in February 2013, social services were called by teachers after one of her siblings told a teacher that their father had been slapping them.
Sara Sharif plays guitar and sings in a video grab image released by Surrey Police Credit: Surrey Police
In May 2013, Z was seen with a burn mark on his leg and forehead which appeared to have been caused by an iron in the family home.
An investigation was carried out and it was concluded that the burn happened accidentally.
During Sara’s murder trial, it emerged that she had been burned with an iron on her buttocks before she died. Police said that more than one person would have been needed to restrain her.
In 2013, Sharif and Ms Domin made a written agreement with Surrey Children’s Services that they were not to use physical chastisement on Sara.
They were also to ensure that Sara could not access the front door and get outside of the property without adult supervision after another sibling was previously found outside of the home alone.
In November 2014, Sara was placed into foster care after her sibling Z said that Ms Domin had bitten him.
In July 2015 social workers noted that both Z and Sara had scars potentially consistent with cigarette burns. Ms Domin and Sharif said they were chicken pox scars.
Sara was reported to have some “disturbed behaviour”, which included standing facing a wall, and was said to be fearful of returning to her parents.
Despite all this, in November that year, the family court concluded that the children should live with Ms Domin and have supervised visits with Sharif.
He was ordered to carry out a domestic violence perpetrator course but attended 10 out of 16 sessions.
Mother agreed to Sara’s move
In the summer of 2017, Sharif finalised his divorce from Ms Domin and began a relationship with Batool.
He was granted permission to have unsupervised contact with Sara and her siblings partly because of the “positive influence” of Batool.
Beinash Batool, Sara’s stepmother, was also found guilty of murdering the schoolgirl Credit: Surrey Police
In March 2019, the children began living Sharif and Batool full-time. Sharif claimed this happened because Sara told him she was being abused by Ms Domin.
It was claimed that Sara had made allegations against her mother, saying she had slapped her and pulled her hair.
On another occasion, she claimed her mother tried to drown her in the bath.
In May Sharif and Batool applied, with Ms Domin’s consent, for Sara and her sibling to live with them.
In an s.7 report ordered by the Family Court on Sara’s welfare, the council recorded that Sara had disclosed physical assaults by Ms Domin, and concluded that the mother had a low capacity to meet Sara’s needs.
It recommended that Sara should live with Sharif and Batool and have supervised contact once per fortnight with Ms Domin.
A judge agreed with the s.7 report and granted Sharif and Batool custody.
From 2019 onwards, the family had no further dealings with the court system in any form until on Oct 14 this year, Batool and Sharif went on trial for Sara’s murder.
Student who murdered woman, 34, in random beach attack previously accused of stalking
Student who murdered woman, 34, in random beach attack previously accused of stalking
Nasen Saadi found guilty of fatally stabbing Amie Gray on Bournemouth beach in May
Amie Gray was stabbed 10 times by Nasen Saadi in May Credit: FACEBOOK
Will BoltonCrime correspondent
18 December 2024 3:06pm GMT
A criminology student who killed a stranger in a random attack on Bournemouth beach was accused of stalking three months before the murder, it can now be revealed.
Nasen Saadi, described by his grandfather as a “clever young man”, has been found guilty of fatally stabbing Amie Gray, 34, and attempting to murder a second woman following a nine-day trial at Winchester Crown Court.
The 20-year-old, from Croydon, was “inspired” by infamous high-profile stabbings and had made “provocative statements” to female students on his course at Greenwich University, including telling one that “women were weaker than men”.
Saadi, who is of Iraqi-Thai heritage and moved to the UK when he was four, killed physical trainer Gray and attempted to murder her friend Leanne Miles, 38, in Bournemouth on May 24 this year.
Nasen Saadi was convicted of fatally stabbing Amie Gray following a trial at Winchester Crown Court
The two women were sitting on the sand on Durley Chine beach at night when Saadi, who had been prowling the promenade looking for victims, approached them and began a frenzied attack.
Ms Miles said he only fled after she begged him to spare her life, saying: “Please stop, I’ve got children.”
Three months before the attack, an allegation of stalking was made against Saadi. The Metropolitan Police has referred itself to the police watchdog as a result.
It can now be revealed that while in custody, Saadi asked a female prison officer how much press attention his case was getting before touching himself in his cell. A male officer was also said to have witnessed the incident.
Prosecutor Sarah Jones KC tried to persuade the judge that the jury should hear this evidence as it shows a motive for Saadi for carrying out the stabbing, namely excitement and press attention.
The prosecution said CCTV showed Nasen Saadi ‘loitering’ behind Amie Gray and Leanne Miles Credit: Crown Prosecution Service
Charlie Sherrard KC, defending, explained that Saadi was on a 24-hour watch at the time for safety reasons and claimed it was normal for a male prisoner in his position to do that in his cell.
The judge ruled in favour of the defence, not allowing the prison officer’s evidence to be heard by the jury, saying the evidence was “more prejudicial than probative” and it did not help the prosecution prove his motive.
Dr Lisa-Marie Reiss, Saadi’s lecturer at Greenwich University, provided a statement to the court in which she said he would make controversial remarks during seminars relating to “women being weaker than men” and how “they shouldn’t work in certain jobs”.
She said Saadi would “repeatedly make very provocative statements” during lessons and this had “upset” his course mates.
During the trial, prosecutors claimed that quietly spoken Saadi, who declined to give evidence, carried out the killing because he “wanted to know what it felt like to take a life”.
Ms Jones said: “Perhaps he wanted to know what it would be like to make women feel afraid, perhaps he thought it would make him feel powerful, make him interesting to others.
“Perhaps he just couldn’t bear to see people engaged in a happy normal social interaction and he decided to lash out, to hurt, to butcher.”
Sian Grey, right, has attended every day of the trial following the murder of her wife, Aime Credit: Gray family
She said he wanted the “notoriety a killing of this sort might bring him” and dreamed of being the “star of a true crime episode”.
The trial heard Saadi had asked his lecturer so many questions about the criminal defence to murder that she had asked him: “You’re not planning a murder, are you?”
When he was arrested Saadi was living with his grandfather and aunt at their detached home in the quiet suburb of Purley, South London. He attended Selsdon Primary School before going on to Riddlesdown Collegiate.
A fellow student described him as quiet but “seemingly harmless”.
Speaking to The Telegraph, Saadi’s grandfather said the house was raided by armed officers with submachine guns four days after the murder.
He said: “Nasen was just sitting upstairs calmly in his room when they broke the door down and entered. I was sitting in the living room. Nasen had been living here ever since he left university.”
Plotting and preparing for months
Saadi’s grandfather, who refused to give his name, said he “knows his grandson is innocent”.
He said: “It is unfortunate because he joined a criminology course and when he, as a clever young man, tried to ask questions on the course, that has ended up being used as evidence against him.
“Basically, it is the only evidence against him.They don’t have any direct evidence. You have to ask your lecturer questions and now it is being turned against him.
“They had nothing on the weapons he is supposed to have used, there is no DNA or even CCTV.”
He added: “He is a clever boy, he is not naive, he thinks about things deeply, he plans them carefully, he works out what he is going to do, he is not stupid.”
Court sketch of Nasen Saadi during his trial at Winchester Crown Court Credit: ELIZABETH COOK/PA
The court heard Saadi had been plotting and preparing for the murder for months. Prosecutors said he had gone to “extraordinary” lengths to ensure there was no DNA evidence.
His grandfather claimed that before the murder, Saadi told him he wanted to go to Bournemouth for a holiday to “prove his independence” and swim in the sea.
Saadi checked into a Travelodge hotel in Bournemouth city centre at 3:09pm, on May 21 this year.
On his first night in the city he carried out a “recce” of the promenade where he would go on to stab Gray three days later.
Social struggles
He said that his grandson, who stabbed Gray 10 times, was so “gentle” he “couldn’t even crack an egg” if he was asked to.
This grandfather said Saadi wanted to go on holiday by himself as he didn’t really have any friends and “didn’t mix socially”. Neighbours said they rarely saw Saadi but knew the rest of the family well.
He said that Saadi was born in Thailand and came to the UK with his mother and father, who now run a fruit importation business, when he was four years old.
The Telegraph tried to approach his parents at their home in Purley but were told “no comment, nothing to say”.
Despite his grandfather’s claims, the trial heard that Saadi’s parents had been forced to hide two knives and an axe from him prior to the stabbing.
Saadi had taken an interest in “deliberately offensive-looking weapons” in the months preceding the murder and had purchased several knives from online retailers Saadi refused to provide detectives with the pin number for his phone and accepted a charge of failing to comply with a notice requirement disclosure.
His grandfather said Saadi was struggling in prison, adding: “He tells me he can’t sleep due to the noise of the other prisoners who are crying, shouting, fighting.
“He has basically stopped speaking. He said to his father “I don’t understand why they think it is m
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