The Home Office has said it will 'leave no stone unturned' in its bid to tackle child sexual grooming after it was reported that nearly 19,000 minors in England were exploited in the past year.

Latest figures show a sharp increase in the number of child grooming victims over the last five years, according to The Independent.

Areas including Birmingham, Lancashire and Bradford had some of the highest rates of child grooming victims in Britain.

Figures showed that Lancashire recorded more than 600 children who were victims of grooming of any local authority. It was followed by Birmingham with almost 500 children, Surrey with almost 450 children, and Bradford with more than 400 children [File photo]

Local authorities identified around 18,700 suspected victims in 2018-19, up from 3,300 five years ago, the website reported.

A spokesman for the Home Office said the department 'is committed to tackling child sexual abuse and will leave no stone unturned in tackling this abhorrent behaviour'.

Which local authorities have the highest numbers of children who were victims of grooming? Figures obtained from the Department for Education show: Lancashire- 624

Birmingham- 490

Surrey- 447

Bradford- 414

Gloucestershire- 409 Advertisement

Sarah Champion, the Labour MP for Rotherham, which has been targeted by grooming gangs, told The Independent the figures show this type of exploitation 'remains one of the largest forms of child abuse in the country'.

She added: 'Too many times, Government has said it will 'learn lessons', yet 19,000 children are still at risk of sexual exploitation.'

The figures, obtained from the Department for Education, showed that Lancashire recorded more than 600 children who were victims of grooming of any local authority.

It was followed by Birmingham, Surrey , Bradford and Gloucestershire.

Earlier this month four men from Telford in the West Midlands were jailed for abusing a young girl who was sold for sex and raped.

The offences took place between 2001 and 2002 and started when the girl, who is now an adult, was 13.

The victim told the court she was assaulted by other unidentified males, with the abuse continuing until she was in her mid teens.

The Home Office spokesman added that the department launched the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse 'to get to the truth, expose what has gone wrong and learn lessons for the future'.

He added: 'The inquiry operates independently of government and, within its terms of reference, decides for itself what it investigates.

'The inquiry is investigating institutional responses to child sexual exploitation by organised criminal networks with public hearings set for the spring of 2020.'