In response to Baroness Louise Casey's "damning" report, the home secretary announces a series of measures taking action on the 12 recommendations she makes.
Those actions are:
- New laws "to protect children and support victims" so they are no longer "blamed" for crimes committed against them;
- New police operations to pursue perpetrators;
- A national public inquiry to "direct local investigations and hold institutions to account for past failures";
- New ethnicity data and research to "face up to the facts on exploitation and abuse";
- "New action" in social services for children to identify those at risk";
- More action to support child victims of abuse and "to tackle new forms of exploitation and abuse".
Yvette Cooper describes this as "the biggest programme of work ever pursued to root out the scourge of grooming gangs and child sexual exploitation".
She goes on to say that the primary recommendation of the review is that "we must see children as children".
Casey "concludes that too many grooming cases have been dropped or downgraded from rape to lesser charges because a 13鈥�15-year-old is perceived to have been 'in love with' or 'had consented to' sex with the perpetrator".
To end that, the government will change the law so that "adults who engage in penetrative sex with a child under 16 face the most serious charge of rape".
On the second recommendation of a national criminal investigation, the home secretary says the police will "launch a new National Criminal Operation into grooming gangs" to ensure "grooming gangs are always treated as serious and organised crime".
On the recommendation for a national public inquiry, Cooper explains that Casey says it should be "time limited" to examine "continued denial, resistance and legal wrangling among local agencies".
And the collection of ethnicity data - current not recorded for thirds of grooming gang perpetrators - will be improved, particularly in Greater Manchester, West Yorkshire and South Yorkshire where "suspects of group-based child sexual offences were disproportionately likely to be Asian men".
Cooper goes on to say that the "vast majority of people in our British Asian and Pakistani heritage communities continue to be appalled by these terrible crimes" - and says the review identifies perpetrators who are "White British, European, African or Middle Eastern".
The government will also improve information sharing between agencies.
And there will be "additional training for mental health staff in schools on identifying and supporting children and young people who have experienced trauma, exploitation and abuse".
More broadly, Cooper says: "Those who groom children or commit sexual offences will not be granted asylum in the UK and we will do everything in our power to remove them, and we are bringing forward a change to the law, so that anyone convicted of sexual offences is excluded from the asylum system and denied refugee status."