The last resting place of Sara Sherif was unveiled after the 10-year-old was buried in a Polish village a thousand miles of the house where she was murdered in Surrey.
The schoolgirl was found dead in August last year with at least 71 external injuries, including bruises, burns and biting on her body.
Her taxi driver father Urfan Sharif, 43, and stepmother Beinash Batool, 30, were found guilty of her murder, with Urfan being sentenced to 40 years in prison in December, while Beinash received 33 years.
Now she is finally laid to rest at her funeral surrounded By fresh bouquets flowers in a beautiful cemetery, with her last name with the name of her mother, Olga Domin.
Sara was described as a 'cheerful little soul' who loved singing and dancing and one day dreaming of appearing on the X factor, the Times reported.
During a ten -week test in the old Bailey, the authorities did not enter to identify that Sara was in danger for years before her broken and battered body was discovered.
Sara was taken out of school in April 2023 and the violence against her intensified in the weeks before her death.
The child commissioner of England, Dame Rachel de Souza, has described it as 'madness' that a risky child could be taken out of school and called for a change in the law, so that children who are probably suspected of abuse are suspected are not trained at home .
The last resting place of Sara Sherif was unveiled after the 10-year-old was buried in a Polish village
Urfan Sharif, 42, was imprisoned in the old Bailey in December
Sara Sharif's stepmother Beinash Batool, 30, depicted, was arrested on Gatwick Airport
After the ruling, the Ministry of Education said that it is already taking action to ensure that no child falls through the cracks. “
A spokesperson added: “This includes revising social care for children and bringing in larger guarantees for children in home education, so this can never be used to hide abuse.”
Earlier this week, the judge who handed the custody of Sara Sharif to her father before beating the 10-year-old to death in a milestone victory for open justice.
The judge is a renowned lawyer who has defended the rights of judges to be able to work from home, also for hearings, because she believes that living work traffic is a 'full waste of time'.
Judge Alison Raeside was the first sitting judge in the UK that took maternity leave.
The 66-year-old is married to a fellow circuit judge and has four children, all of whom have entered the legal profession.
Mrs. Domin previously told UWAGA's Polish canal about the abuse of Sara's father: 'Once he tried to set me on fire, guttered oil on me, but his cousin stopped him. He just locked me in a room. Sicked me up all day until the police arrived. '
Social services were repeatedly mentioned after children had suffered inexplicable bruises, bite brands, scratches and burns, but Sharif managed to spoil them and play on the vulnerability of his wife and broken English to blame Olga or even other children for it inflicting the wounds.
Mrs Domin remembered that Sharif would even offer children chocolate if they touched her and he later encouraged a teenager to simulate his sadistic cruelty.
The convicted thief spent his time drinking and gambling, so Mrs Domin would eventually fly to Jhelum where he secretly married his cousin in an Islamic ceremony before returning to start a third marriage to Batool.
Sara was taken to foster care in 2014 after reports that children were burned, beaten and bitten.
The schoolgirl, depicted with her mother Olga, was found dead in Woking in August last year with at least 71 external injuries
Sara, depicted, suffered an unimaginable test by her father and stepmother
Judge Alison Raeside, depicted, was the first sitting judge in the UK who took pregnancy leave
But a family court decided to grant Sharif -Guardianship in 2019 after Mrs Domin was to blame for the attacks.
Her desperate mother told the post that she had lost all the confidence in the authorities in Great -Britain: “Did you think I was such a terrible, unsuitable mother?”
“They had Urfan's file and showed how violent he was, right? If they had taken that in the system, Sara would still be alive. '
Sharif's abuse accelerated after he had been handed custody, with daily blows so bad that Sara was forced to wear a hijab to hide her injuries.
Neighbors reported that they heard 'gut-warning screams' and the sound 'as if someone had been hit or beaten' from the house in Woking, Surrey, where Sara was treated as a domestic slave.
As early as June 2022, teachers noted Sara's bruises, but the frightened student would down her hijab and brush out injuries as a coincidence.
When the school made a reference to social provisions in March 2023 about bruises on her face, the case was closed only six days later without further action.
A month later, Sharif was withdrawn from the class to be trained at home and was never seen alive outside the house.