Following the passing of 10-year-old Sara Sharif, three people are still being sought out globally.
Sara, whose corpse was discovered unattended in the early hours of Thursday at her Woking, Surrey, home after a call for her wellbeing, will have a post-mortem examination later.
According to Surrey Police, the three individuals it was looking for departed the country the day before.
To find them, the force is collaborating with foreign law enforcement.
The neighbourhood was shocked by her death, according to the local imam.
Imam of the Shah Jahan Mosque Hafiz Hashmi claimed he has been unable to sleep lately.
“We are incredibly shocked and saddened,” he said on BBC Radio Surrey. Can’t believe such a thing could happen to such a good kid.
We pray for the girl’s soul to find peace because we don’t know the details of her death. We hope that we can uncover the facts about how she died so that the girl’s kin may bury her.
People are startled and unable to comprehend how this could occur to such a defenceless infant. To find them, the force is collaborating with foreign law enforcement.
In addition, a nearby church was made available for neighbourhood people to visit for “prayer, reflection, or comfort,” and flowers were put outside the house as a mark of respect.
The semi-detached home on Hammond Road had a significant police presence last week, and neighbours told reporters a Pakistani family with six “very young” children had moved in in April.
A neighbour who preferred to remain anonymous stated of Sara that she “appeared to help look after her younger brothers and sisters, and especially the baby” after the body of Sara was found.
They said that they “seemed a happy family who cared for all their children”.
On August 10, at around 02:50 BST, Sara’s body was discovered at the unoccupied residence.
Investigators are still on the scene at the Hammond Road property, and formal identification has not yet taken place.
A BBC presenter in the core of a ‘sex photo’ scandal is apparently ‘extremely angry’ and ‘wants to stay anonymous’, according to Jeremy Vine.
The BBC Radio 2 anchor has asked the presenter to come forward and said: ‘It’s absolutely dreadful. I really think this stuff has got to stop. I don’t want to go through this again, ever.
Four people have now made accusations against the host, with the first coming from parents who claimed their child was sent £35,000 over a three-year period for pornographic photos.
A second young person claims they were sent expletive-filled abusive messages, while a third says the presenter broke lockdown rules to meet them.
A fourth, now 22, claims they were sent Instagram messages containing love heart emojis and kisses when they were 17.
The unnamed presenter is accused of appearing in his underwear in a video call by the parents of the young person in connection with the initial claim.
But a letter from a lawyer representing the young person said there had been no inappropriate behaviour and called The Sun’s story ‘rubbish’.
After two teens died in a crash last night, rioting broke out on the streets of Cardiff, where more than 100 thugs set cars on fire and threw objects at police.
In a confrontation with South Wales Police, the mob was captured on camera hurling pyrotechnics, paving stones, and even a door before storming towards the police with riot shields.
Two cars were set on fire, and it’s claimed that rioters beat a bystander after mistaking them for an undercover police officer.
Jane Palmer, the owner of a burnt out Ford Focus on Highmead Road, said she and her family watched from their window as rioters set fire to her car. She said: ‘I’mdisabledso now I’m trapped without my car. Why are they doing this? It’s just silly now.’
The chaos broke out after officers were called out to reports of a serious collision on Snowden Road at around 6pm.
Alun Michael, the Police and Crime Commissioner in South Wales, said ‘something like a dozen’ were injured in the aftermath, adding it was lucky more were not seriously hurt.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘My understanding is that there was a road traffic accident involving two teenagers on an off-road bike or scooter and sadly, they died.
‘That’s an incident obviously that is being investigated in its own right. And that appears to have sparked, for reasons that aren’t clear, the disorder… in which something like a dozen officers were injured.
‘Fortunately, none of them life-threatening, and the connection between the two is far from clear.
‘So obviously there’s going to be investigations going on this morning to try and establish what happened.
‘It would appear that there were rumours, and those rumours became rife, of a police chase, which wasn’t the case and I think it illustrates the speed with which rumours can run around with the activity that goes on social media nowadays, and that events can get out of hand.’
John Urquhart, the general secretary of the UK Harmony Party, lives in Ely and witnessed the incident escalate from the start of the evening.
He said a lack of communication from police to the community may have led to the escalation of the event.
Mr Urquhart said: ‘The key thing right at the start was they did not communicate with the crowd, there was no attempt to communicate with the crowd and they showed nothing but disdain for the community and acted like we didn’t deserve to know what happened on our own doorstep.
‘There was nobody going through the crowd crucially, I think the police really needed people to be out talking to the community and putting their minds at ease.’
Mr Urquhart, who has lived in the area for the last few years, said the situation started to escalate at around 8pm.
He said the community in Ely is tight-knit, adding: ‘When you start to see it in context, it’s emotions that have built up and bottled up and eventually, I think the police just brought too many people or were too visible.’
At 8.21pm, South Wales Police tweeted: ‘There is now a large number of officers working to manage the collision, but also to de-escalate ongoing disorder at the scene.
‘We urge anyone involved to leave the scene immediately and ask local residents to stay away while the matter is brought to a safe conclusion.’
In an update at 1.10am, police said they were continuing to monitor and respond to ‘disorder in Ely’, adding: ‘A number of vehicles have been set alight. Arrests are being made. A large police presence remains in the area.’
A man called Connor, who also lives in Highmead Road, said: ‘It’s been a mad night.
‘This is not the norm around here but people are pretty anti-police and that’s reflected on both sides, not that that’s my opinion.
‘Although we’ve been afflicted by this riot, I still understand it. When people have enough, this is what happens.’
Rubbish and wheelie bins were set alight as well as cars by rioters as they continued to be moved through the streets by armoured police.
Rioters gradually moved down Highmead Road in Ely, Cardiff, followed by police who were trying to disperse them.
They continued to throw missiles and set cars alight.
Another resident of Highmead Road, who did not want to be named, said: ‘Enough is enough now. This has gone beyond.
‘When people are making fun of what’s happening on social media it’s crossed a line.
‘This is our neighbourhood and those doing this are just kids. It needs to stop.’