It’s understood that the Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will announce a plan to implement local inquiries into grooming gangs in a statement to the Commons later.
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Sir Keir Starmer's woes look set to worsen as the majority of Britons still support a national inquiry into the grooming gangs but want Nigel Farage's party to lead it. The shock result came as Home Secretary Yvette Cooper announced a plan in the Commons on Thursday to support local inquiries into the grooming gangs scandal,
His comments were a response to remarks made by Sir Keir Starmer on Monday morning, when he criticised politicians “calling for inquiries because they want to jump on a bandwagon of the far-right”.
UK Interior minister Yvette Cooper also said several new local inquiries into cases of abuse would be launched, bowing to political pressure for further action but stopping short of demands for a new nationwide inquiry.
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Home Secretary Yvette Cooper says government will also undertake a ‘rapid’ review of child sexual abuse in the UK.
Within hours of the Iraqi prime minister leaving Downing Street, it was announced three men with alleged links to people smuggling were arrested in Iraq
MPs have warned of “serious alarm bells” for the UK’s security over reports senior cabinet ministers have intervened on a Chinese planning application for a huge new London embassy. Foreign secretary David Lammy,
The announcement follows weeks of mounting pressure on Sir Keir Starmer to address the issue of child sexual exploitation.
The British government says it will support a series of local inquiries into organized child sexual abuse in the wake of a furor largely stoked by the world’s richest man Elon Musk.
The home secretary has announced the professionals who work with children will face criminal sanctions if they do not report child sexual abuse. Yvette Cooper told MPs that a “significant package of measures” will be announced by the government in the next few weeks aimed at tackling online child sexual exploitation.