THESE are the haunting CCTV images which show a little girl in her pyjamas begging a shopkeeper for something to drink just hours before she was found dead.
The tragic footage of Shanay Walker shows her running barefoot into a corner shop the night before her frail bruised body was discovered.
Yesterday seven-year-old Shanay’s evil gran was told to "burn in hell" as she was jailed for a catalogue of cruelty to children.
Juanila Smikle brutally beat her granddaughter and denied her from having food and water in the years leading up to her death.
The 55-year-old was caring for her granddaughter and manipulated social workers into believing that the girl's injuries were accidental after teachers raised the alarm.
A court heard Shanay suffered more than 50 injuries and died from a brain haemorrhage after suffering a "sustained, vicious and brutal beating" in July 2014.
Shanay was living with Smikle and her aunt Kay-Ann Morris in Bestwood, Notts., after her biological mother Leanne Walker, 21, was forced to give her up.
The pair were previously convicted of "about the worst case of child cruelty" after the "most wicked betrayal of trust".
Smikle was jailed for four years in June this year but her conviction was overturned on appeal.
She was hauled back before a court to face a further five counts of child cruelty - including to her granddaughter - after Shanay's death prompted an inquiry.
On Tuesday Smikle, of Nottingham, stared blankly ahead and showed no emotion in the dock as she was jailed for seven years at the same court.
Sentencing, Gregory Dickinson QC said: "You contributed to the suffering that little girl had during her short life. You beat her severely."
Smikle was told "to burn in hell" by a member of the public as she calmly left the dock, brushing her shoulder and muttering something under her breath.
Prosecutor Richard Pratt QC told the court Smikle had not been directly responsible for Shanay's death.
However, he added that inquiries showed the grandmother "wilfully assaulted and ill-treated" the child for two years before her death.
The court also heard how another victim - now an adult - was subjected to beatings and used as a slave when she was aged 12 to 16 between 2003 and 2006.
Smikle would "hit her, kick her... use anything she could lay her hands on" to beat her victim, who knew the assault would be severe if she was gagged to quieten the screams.
Jurors also heard the four other children, including Shanay, were made to punish each other, eventually learning to pretend to inflict pain to keep Smikle happy.
Shanay had been removed from the care of her mum, who had been suffering from anxiety and depression, at the age of five.
Her father, Vinroy Campbell, was in prison, so his sister Morris volunteered to take the little girl in.
But the child was subjected to months of violent punishment by her "strict" churchgoing aunt.
Morris and Smikle were sentenced to eight years and four years in jail, respectively, in June 2015 but Smikle's conviction was reversed by the Court of Appeal.
At her retrial last month, the court heard Smikle had made Shanay face a wall and never let her have any fun.
The little girl would try to steal water, apples and food and would be told off for it.
Smikle had slapped her in a bedroom with her hand on her back or shoulder two or three times in one go and Shanay would cry when this happened to her.
Smikle denied the charges but refused to give evidence at her retrial.
Stephen Moses QC, defending, said Smikle suffered appallingly as a youngster in her upbringing in her native Jamacia.
He added: "She has lost all of her family, her worldly belongings have been lost, her home has been lost, her children have depleted her entire life savings leaving her penniless."
After the case, the child's mother Leanne Walker said widowed Smikle had shown "no remorse".
Speaking outside court, she added: "To me it is not justice for Shanay, no matter what prison sentence she serves, it is not going to bring her back."
An NSPCC spokesperson added: "Now that Smikle has been held to account for her reprehensible behaviour, the events leading up to the tragic death of Shanay Walker must be examined.
"'Lessons must be learned' is a familiar epitaph in these desperately sad situations, but this cannot be an empty sentiment.
"A serious case review will explore whether opportunities to better protect Shanay were missed and the findings must be heeded, then acted upon to make tangible advances in child protection."
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