POLICE recorded more than one child abuse image offence each day in West Mercia last year, data has revealed.

The NSPCC has warned that offenders are using social networks to target children for abuse online, grooming and manipulating them into sending naked images.

A Freedom of Information request by the children’s charity shows that between April 2017 and March this year West Mercia Police recorded 517 offences of viewing child abuse images.

This was down slightly from 530 over the previous 12 months.

A single offence recorded by police can involve hundreds of indecent images of children.

Of the total offences recorded, 441 were for taking, making or distributing indecent photographs. Meanwhile, 71 were for possession of an indecent photograph and five were for possessing prohibited images of children.

Across the UK’s police forces, nearly 23,000 offences were recorded in 2017-18, 25 per cent more than in 2016-17.

The figures come after the home secretary Sajid Javid warned internet giants, including Google and Facebook, that they could face new laws unless they increase their efforts to tackle child abuse content.

Tony Stower, NSPCC’s head of child safety online, said: “Every one of these images represents a real child who has been groomed and abused to supply the demand of this appalling trade.

“The lack of adequate protections on social networks has given offenders all too easy access to children to target and abuse. This is the last chance saloon for social networks on whose platforms this abuse is often taking place.”

A recent NSPCC survey of 40,000 young people revealed an average of one in 50 school children had sent a nude or semi-nude image to an adult.

Crime minister Victoria Atkins said the scale of online child sexual exploitation was a "stain on our world".

"The Home Secretary has made five unequivocal demands of web giants to remove child sexual abuse content from their platforms, including stopping grooming and shutting down live-streaming," she said.

"He expects immediate action and how far we legislate will be informed by the action and attitude taken by the technology industry."