BBC Wales News

The chief of the Welsh Conservatives within the Senedd has accused different politicians of shutting him down over requires a Wales-wide inquiry into grooming gangs.
Darren Millar mentioned a statutory inquiry overlaying Wales and England, introduced through the high minister on Saturday, used to be “welcome but long overdue”.
In February, the Senedd rejected requires a Welsh inquiry, however participants voted unanimously that the Welsh executive will have to imagine one.
The Welsh executive has been requested to remark.
Responding to the brand new inquiry Millar mentioned: “Every month of delay in getting to this position has caused even more hurt to those brave victims who have spoken out about their harrowing experiences and campaigned for justice.
“When I raised the will for an inquiry within the Senedd again in January, different politicians attempted to close me down, but it surely made me the entire extra made up our minds to struggle for the prone sufferers of those crimes,” he added.
Millar also said Wales should not be an “afterthought” for the brand new inquiry.

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of a U-turn by opposition parties in Westminster after months of rejecting a new inquiry.
He changed his mind after an audit led by Baroness Louise Casey into the data and evidence on the nature and scale of group-based child sexual abuse.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is set to make a statement to the House of Commons on Wednesday and the Casey report will be published alongside it.

In January, the Welsh Tory leader and the Senedd’s presiding officer clashed after Millar relayed the experiences of abuse survivor Emily Vaughn, who goes under a pseudonym, and who suffered some of the abuse in Wales.
Ms Vaughn later accused Jones of “downplaying” her experience.
Jones said she had been “searching for to offer protection to sufferers of abuse” and that she was “no longer sufficiently conscious” that Vaughn had spoken publicly before.
Millar said the new inquiry was a “vindication” for Ms Vaughn’s courage and bravery.
A prior unbiased inquiry into the sexual abuse of youngsters used to be led through Prof Alexis Jay and reported in 2022.