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Council Hopes To Prove It Has Learnt Lessons from Tragic Sara Sharif Case

Published on: 10 Dec, 2025
Updated on: 10 Dec, 2025

Sara Sharif Surrey Police

By Emily Dalton

local democracy reporter

Surrey County Councillors unanimously backed  a cross-party motion responding to the review into the death of Sara Sharif, with members admitting the system meant to protect her failed “repeatedly”.

The council promised to not just keep “learning the lessons” but commit to real action in children safeguarding.

Sara, a 10-year-old schoolgirl, was murdered by her father and step-mother in her home in Woking, in August 2023.

See related, archived articles here.

An independent safeguarding review into Sara’s tragic death found: “There are clearly several points in Sara’s life, in particular during the last few months, where different actions could and should have been taken and the system failed to keep her safe.” The review was led by the Surrey Safeguarding Children Partnership.

All 68 councillors voted in favour of the motion at a full council meeting yesterday (December 9). The motion was brought by Cllr Lance Spencer who said he was worried the council was already trying to “move on” too quickly after recent inspections rated children’s services more positively.

“It felt like there was a danger of pushing this into the past,” he told the chamber. “I wasn’t prepared to let that happen. The public needs to see we’re serious about this, with real action and tight timescales.”

At the heart of the deal is public scrutiny and independent oversight. Councillors agreed to:

  • Hold a public, extraordinary scrutiny meeting of the Children, Families, Lifelong Learning and Culture Select Committee before the end of the year
  • Bring in an independent expert to dig into the culture, systems and decision-making inside children’s services, with reports due in early 2026
  • Write to the Secretary of State and local MPs pushing for national legal changes to close safeguarding gaps

The debate in the council chamber was emotional and, at times, blunt.

“The safety net that should have protected her failed her repeatedly,” Cllr Liz Townsend, who seconded the motion, said. “Transparency isn’t optional. It’s the foundation for rebuilding trust.”

Cllr Liz Townsend

Reciting the judge’s remarks, Cllr Townsend (Lib Dem, Cranleigh West) said Sara was “a very courageous little girl with an unquenchable spirit” and said what happened was “a catalogue of missed opportunities, poor communication and ill-informed assumptions”.

Cllr George Potter

Others were equally direct. Cllr George Potter (Lib Dem. Burpham) accused the council of being more worried about reputation than reform. “There’s been a culture of denial,” he said. “It shouldn’t have taken this horrific murder to recognise that children’s services were failing.”

Cllr Robert Evans raised concerns about home-schooling, while Cllr Edward Hawkins warned that cultural awareness and race had to be discussed honestly, including fears that neighbours stayed silent because they didn’t want to be seen as racist.

Cllr Clare Curran

Not everyone painted an entirely bleak picture. Cllr Clare Curran (Deputy and former Cabinet Member for Children, Families and Lifelong Learning) reminded the chamber that children’s services are under huge pressure, handling more than 6,000 contacts a year, with around 700 children on protection plans and 900 in care, and urged members not to forget the commitment of frontline staff.

Cllr Tim Oliver

Council leader Tim Oliver said inspectors had recognised improvements since 2022, but accepted that independent scrutiny was necessary. Cllr Oliver said he is confident the council has the right team to drive the improvements needed in the service and welcomed the independent review.

Cllr Chris Townsend

Perhaps the bluntest warning came from Cllr Chris Townsend (Res Assoc & Ind, Ashstead), who said residents are tired of hearing the same phrases. “When people speak they say ‘yet another case’”. He said: “We can’t just keep using the phase: ‘We’ll learn the lessons’. It is our duty, we must not just have glib words or phrases. We must do the right thing.”

Cllr Harry Boparai added: “No motion, recommendations or review will bring about change unless those within the system are willing to confront failings openly and honestly.” He said the culture of the council and the service needed to change to stop another tragedy from happening.

By the end of the debate, councillors from every party lined up behind the same message: words are not enough. Unanimously approving the recommendations, the council hopes to send a message to families across Surrey that it will not just learn the lessons but prove it.

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Responses to Council Hopes To Prove It Has Learnt Lessons from Tragic Sara Sharif Case

  1. Name withheld Reply

    December 10, 2025 at 12:37 pm

    As a SEN [special educational needs] parent who has been dealing with Surrey’s children’s services for eight years, what happened to this little girl could easily have been prevented if the responsible officers had ensured that they have a robust policy in please and that it is followed.

    Sadly there is no accountability and responsibility at the officer level – in fact there is a clear culture of box-ticking and paper-pushing with no willingness to see the children as anything more than numbers on a piece of paper.

    In fact, the council leader with verall responsibility was awarded an OBE.

    Surrey County Council did not want the report to be made publicly available but it will be discussed at the Children’s Select Committee on Monday, December 15.

    The public can join via video call to watch/listen:

    https://mycouncil.surreycc.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?CId=791&MId=10007&Ver=4

  2. Name witheld Reply

    December 11, 2025 at 12:36 pm

    As a parent of a victim of sexual assault who was placed with their perpetrator by children’s social services, scrutiny is long overdue. Let us hope it is swift, transparent, in-depth and leads to action.

  3. Tony Ellis Reply

    December 14, 2025 at 10:39 am

    As usual, nobody is taking responsibility just a lot of hot air. Who has been sacked or even disciplined?

    When will we see some proper action taken to save these vulnerable children?

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