LONDON: A cousin of Beenish Batool, the stepmother of the 10-year-old Sara Sharif who was found dead in a home at Woking, Surrey, has made a public appeal for her relative to return to the United Kingdom and tell the authorities everything.

Requesting anonymity, the relative told Sky News, “Beenish 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.”

“I don’t know, my family don’t know, what happened. It could have been an accident; a misunderstanding,” she added.

Her cousin is originally from Gujrat, and said Ms Batool was estranged from her parents after she ran away to marry Urfan Sharif, the father of Sara, who is now in hiding in Pakistan with his second wife and five children.

The relative said, “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.”

Police continued to look for Mr Sharif and Ms Batool in Pakistan, but raids on the couple’s family homes in Mirpur and Jhelum have yielded nothing. News reports in the UK quoted Pakistani police officials as saying they were asked by the UK authorities to begin the search and manhunt for the couple and children “five days after her body was found”.

Published in Dawn, September 3rd, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Budget presser
14 Jun, 2026

Budget presser

OFFICIAL post-budget media briefings in Pakistan are carefully choreographed affairs, full of reassuring phrases ...
Muharram precautions
14 Jun, 2026

Muharram precautions

WITH Muharram due to start next week, the authorities have already begun annual exercises to ensure that the ...
Blood bequests
14 Jun, 2026

Blood bequests

WORLD Blood Donor Day offers a moment of “gratitude, advocacy and renewed commitment” for thalassaemia patients...
Sustainable path?
Updated 13 Jun, 2026

Sustainable path?

The FY27 budget is the first clear signal that the government is ready to transition from stabilisation to growth.
Prioritising education
13 Jun, 2026

Prioritising education

THOUGH the improvement in the country’s literacy rate may be slight, as highlighted by the Economic Survey, it ...
Poverty’s rise
13 Jun, 2026

Poverty’s rise

AS attention turns to the government’s plans for the coming fiscal year, one set of figures deserves particular...