đ A GRANDFATHERâS GOODBYE âShe was a sweet, quiet little girlâŚâ Those words now echo as a final farewell for 5-year-old Sharon Granites. After days of hope, the search has ended in heartbreakâleaving a family and community in deep grief. Gone too soon⌠but never forgotten.

The desperate days-long search for a five-year-old Northern Territory girl believed to have been abducted has come to a tragic end.
The body of Sharon Granites, known to her family as Kumanjayi Little Baby, was located just before midday on Thursday about 5km from where she went missing.
Sharon was reported missing from her home on Marshall Ct in Old Timers Camp, Alice Springs, about 1.35am on Sunday.
âThis is an incredibly distressing development,â NT Police Commissioner Martin Dole said.
âSharonâs family have been formally notified and our thoughts are firmly with them at this devastating time.â
A post-mortem examination is expected to be conducted on Friday, as investigations continue.
Five-year-old Sharon has been found á´
á´á´á´
. Credit: NT Police
In a statement read out NT Policeâs executive director of cultural reform, Leanne Liddle, the family shared a heartfelt letter.
âTo Kumanjayi Little Baby,â the statement from her mum said.
âMe and Ramsiah miss and love you.
âI know you are in heaven with the rest of the family with Jesus and the Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
âMe and your brother will meet you one day.
âWe are giving our lives to Jesus.
âIt is going to be so hard to live the rest of our lives without you.
âRamsiah wants to tell you that when he sees you in heaven, he is going to give you the biggest hug ever.
âLove from Mum and Ramsiah.â
Sharonâs grandfather Robin said: âThere was nothing I could do â just cryâ.
âShe was a really nice, little, good, quiet girl.â
Robin said he discovered his granddaughter was missing while watching the Anzac Day memorial nearby.
âI heard it was my granddaughter who was being snatched up and [had been] taken off by a man from prison,â he said.
The family also thanked the community for its efforts during the search.
Police urged Jefferson Lewis to hand himself in. Credit: NT Police
Police said Sharon was led away by 47-year-old Jefferson Lewis, who was seen holding her hand about 11pm that night.
A number of items were located on Sunday on the banks of the Todd River behind Old Timers Camp, including a pair of childrenâs underwear, a yellow shirt believed to have been worn by Lewis, and a doona cover.
Police on Thursday said two DNA profiles were identified on the underwear â Sharonâs and Lewisâs.
The focus now is on locating Lewis, police said.
âI say to the family of Jefferson Lewis that we believe heâs murdered this child. Do not á´ssist him. Get him to the police station and weâll look after him,â Dole said.
âAnd I say to Jefferson Lewis, weâre coming for you.â
Police believe Sharon was put to bed by her mother on Saturday night before leaving through an unlocked back door and was later led away by Lewis.
Lewis was staying at the home where Sharon disappeared and is believed to have gone missing around the same time.
Police said they believe he was âunder the influence of alcoholâ at the time of the alleged abduction.
Lewis is understood to have been staying at the home from where Sharon disappeared. Credit: NT Police
Lewis had been released from prison six days before Sharonâs disappearance after serving an 18-month sentence for serious violence-related offences.
From 2016 to 2025 Lewis was sentenced to 64 months in prison for offences including multiple aggravated á´ssaults, breaching domestic violence orders, resisting police and breaching bail.
He does not have a phone, bank account or car, limiting policeâs ability to track him through a digital footprint.
Police on Wednesday said they believe he is still in the local area and may be receiving á´ssistance from others.
âWe absolutely firmly believe that thereâs members of the community that know where he is, where he went, and how to contact him, and we implore those people to come forward and give us that information,â NT Police acting Commissioner Peter Malley said.
He described Sharon as a âvery affectionate little girlâ who is âloved by her familyâ.
Sharonâs family had reported the child was non-verbal and often communicated with her hands.
Sharonâs grandfather, Robin Japanangka Granites, earlier told The Sydney Morning Herald he had been praying for his âreally nice, little, good, quietâ granddaughter to return.
He also delivered a direct message to Lewis.
âI want you to listen to me,â he said.
âI want you to send that baby back. She is our baby. Itâs our kid ⌠she is just too small. Please, can you bring her back? We want her back safe.â
NT Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro said the community now faces âdark daysâ that ârock everyoneâ.
âThe heartbreak of this is real,â she said on Thursday.
âIâve also spoken to our colleague, Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, who is the auntie of Kumanji Little Baby. And so over the days and weeks, we stick together as Territorians, as we always do.
âWe are focused on a grieving family, a grieving town and a grieving NT.
âAs police have said, we now turn our focus to finding the person responsible and bringing them to justice for Sharon.â
Anyone who has any information about the whereabouts of Jefferson Lewis has been urged to contact police.